La eco-colonialidad del extractivismo del litio y la agonía socioambiental del Salar de Atacama: El lado oscuro de la electromovilidad “verde”.

JEREZ, B; BOLADOS, P Y TORRES, ROBINSON

Keywords: litio, salar de Atacama, eco-colonialidad, ecología política, decolonialidad.

Abstract

This article analyses the socio-environmental, hydric, and cultural impacts of the growing extractivism of lithium in the basin of the Salar de Atacama in Chile from the perspective of the modernity/coloniality framework and the decolonial discussions of political ecology. Lithium, as a strategic mineral of global green transition policies, represents an eco-coloniality triggered by the metabolism of electromobility which reproduces structural and historical asymmetries between North and the Global South that contribute to the socio-environmental agony of the basin of the Salar de Atacama. In this study, we analyse testimonies from the Lickanantay communities and documentary sources, which evidence the tensions around the territorial rights involved in the socio-environmental mechanisms of lithium. This paper concludes that the extraction of this mineral expands at the cost of an ecosystem overexploitation that is unsustainable for the indigenous communities and the basins of the Atacama salts flat, raising the need to redesign alternatives of fair and sustainable transitions. © 2023, Universidad Austral de Chile. All rights reserved.

Más información

Título según SCOPUS: The Eco-coloniality of lithium extractivism and the socio-environmental agony of the Salar de Atacama: The dark side of the “green” electromobility; La eco-colonialidad del extractivismo del litio y la agonía socioambiental del Salar de Atacama: El lado oscuro de la electromovilidad “verde”
Título de la Revista: Revista Austral de Ciencias Sociales
Volumen: 2023
Número: 44
Editorial: Universidad Austral de Chile
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Página de inicio: 73
Página final: 91
Idioma: Spanish
DOI:

10.4206/rev.austral.cienc.soc.2023.n44-04

Notas: SCOPUS