*CFP Pollen 2020: Utopian ecologies of urburnable fuels*

In order to limit the probable increase in global mean temperature to 2°C, 
about 80%, 50% and 30% of existing coal, gas and oil reserves, 
respectively, would need to remain under the soil and more ambitious 
targets would be necessary to comply with the commitments made under the 
Paris Agreement. While this awareness has been translated into a number of 
ambitious local initiatives to ‘leave oil in the soil’, ‘coal in the hole’ 
and ‘gas in the grass’, hydrocarbon extraction at the global level has not 
in fact been declining. Decarbonization as a goal remains as utopic as it 
is unavoidable. 

This tension between the seeming impossibility and concrete necessity of 
designating large shares of hydrocarbons as ‘unburnable’ requires urgent 
attention from political ecologists in at least two parallel streams of 
inquiry. The first concerns the process of transition away the contemporary 
centrality of hydrocarbons. This is necessarily a dual transition: away not 
only from a global economy that is dependent on fossil fuels but also from 
a global political system whose rules are dictated by state and capital 
benefiting from extractivism. The second stream has to focus on the shape 
of what is to come. The work of building a world where the ‘extractive 
imperative’ has been defanged, requires novel forms of political strategy, 
geographical criteria, and radical acts of imagination and solidarity. 

To meet these analytical and political challenges, this panel will engage 
with these and other related questions:

   - ·        Where and which resources need to be left untapped? Who 
   should be empowered to make these decisions in a democratic yet urgent 
   manner?
   - ·        What are the institutional structures – economically as well 
   as politically – that need to be constructed to compensate the 
   socio-economic losses of right-holders as well as to resolve conflicts that 
   will emerge at multiple scales? Can this transition be managed without 
   creating centralized and hierarchical political structures that gather 
   their legitimacy from the undeniable urgency of their task?
   - ·        Who will be the main protagonists of this struggle? What 
   forms of intersectional and global alliances are necessary and/or possible? 
   - ·        How does a world of unburnable fuels look like? What types of 
   socio-economic, political and cultural changes are likely to emerge in the 
   wake of a successful transition?
   - ·        How geographical imagination and geovisualization can support 
   the overcoming of petroleum-scapes, by defining geographical criteria, 
   mapping unburnable fuels, and bridging disciplines for the climate justice 
   debate.

Please send your abstracts by the 20th of November to Lorenzo Pellegrini (
[email protected]) and Salvatore Eugenio Pappalardo (
[email protected]). 

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