Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?

Renewables’ industries position themselves at the heart of ecological transition strategies to justify their territorial insertion. This has not, however, protected them from criticism on grounds of sustainability. Indeed, the government of these industries has come under attack, with opponents sayi...

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Main Authors: Gabrielle Bouleau, Caitríona Carter, Arnaud Sergent, Yann Fournis
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Réseau Développement Durable et Territoires Fragiles 2020-04-01
Series:Développement Durable et Territoires
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/developpementdurable/14845
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spelling doaj-80f645704a564757947422c4cc8fc7dc2020-11-25T03:13:25ZfraRéseau Développement Durable et Territoires FragilesDéveloppement Durable et Territoires1772-99712020-04-011110.4000/developpementdurable.14845Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?Gabrielle BouleauCaitríona CarterArnaud SergentYann FournisRenewables’ industries position themselves at the heart of ecological transition strategies to justify their territorial insertion. This has not, however, protected them from criticism on grounds of sustainability. Indeed, the government of these industries has come under attack, with opponents saying that industry actors have failed to address critical interdependencies necessary for sustainability to be achieved, including territorial ones. In this context, this article questions the functional argument of “spatial fit”, used by some analysts of ecological transition to explain the choice of regulatory scale. We do this by examining how actors use territorial resources to politicize the environmental government of these industries. Three case-studies are compared: salmon in Scotland, wind power in Quebec and wood energy in France. We show that the “spatial fit”, argument neither explains governing choices nor is sufficient for actors seeking to build legitimate regulation.http://journals.openedition.org/developpementdurable/14845nature-based renewable industriesgovernment of industryaquaculturewind farmswood energylegitimization
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabrielle Bouleau
Caitríona Carter
Arnaud Sergent
Yann Fournis
spellingShingle Gabrielle Bouleau
Caitríona Carter
Arnaud Sergent
Yann Fournis
Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?
Développement Durable et Territoires
nature-based renewable industries
government of industry
aquaculture
wind farms
wood energy
legitimization
author_facet Gabrielle Bouleau
Caitríona Carter
Arnaud Sergent
Yann Fournis
author_sort Gabrielle Bouleau
title Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?
title_short Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?
title_full Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?
title_fullStr Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?
title_full_unstemmed Quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?
title_sort quels territoires pertinents pour écologiser les industries qui misent sur le renouvelable ?
publisher Réseau Développement Durable et Territoires Fragiles
series Développement Durable et Territoires
issn 1772-9971
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Renewables’ industries position themselves at the heart of ecological transition strategies to justify their territorial insertion. This has not, however, protected them from criticism on grounds of sustainability. Indeed, the government of these industries has come under attack, with opponents saying that industry actors have failed to address critical interdependencies necessary for sustainability to be achieved, including territorial ones. In this context, this article questions the functional argument of “spatial fit”, used by some analysts of ecological transition to explain the choice of regulatory scale. We do this by examining how actors use territorial resources to politicize the environmental government of these industries. Three case-studies are compared: salmon in Scotland, wind power in Quebec and wood energy in France. We show that the “spatial fit”, argument neither explains governing choices nor is sufficient for actors seeking to build legitimate regulation.
topic nature-based renewable industries
government of industry
aquaculture
wind farms
wood energy
legitimization
url http://journals.openedition.org/developpementdurable/14845
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AT arnaudsergent quelsterritoirespertinentspourecologiserlesindustriesquimisentsurlerenouvelable
AT yannfournis quelsterritoirespertinentspourecologiserlesindustriesquimisentsurlerenouvelable
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