Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and Desertec

Herman Sörgel’s gigantic project “Atlantropa” is a prominent European project in terms of infrastructure and territory in the first half of the 20th century. It is an example of a modernity that is necessarily believing in progress through technology – as will be shown the first section of this essa...

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Main Author: Alexander Stumm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2020-12-01
Series:Ardeth
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/1883
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spelling doaj-522fd52e3d294584818d527592814b8b2021-07-08T16:41:56ZengRosenberg & SellierArdeth2532-64572611-934X2020-12-017127140Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and DesertecAlexander StummHerman Sörgel’s gigantic project “Atlantropa” is a prominent European project in terms of infrastructure and territory in the first half of the 20th century. It is an example of a modernity that is necessarily believing in progress through technology – as will be shown the first section of this essay, but it is also profitable in that it historically locates Europe’s current energy policy infrastructure projects in Africa, to which the second section of the essay is dedicated. The vision pursued under the name Destertec envisages the large-scale implementation of renewable energy power plants, especially solar thermal power plants in Northern Africa. Both projects share an unshakeable belief in ecomodernist ideas, meaning the solution of socio-economic and ecological challenges through technology (Gall, 2014). Furthermore, argumentation patterns of the 1920s based in colonial ideology of a Pan-Europa or Eurafrica still serve to advertise development programs in the 21st century. The historical perspective with an overview about “Atlantropa” thus serves as a mean to question justifications of recent European energy projects in Northern Africa.http://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/1883AtlantropaDesertecenergy infrastructureecomodernismHerman Sörgel
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexander Stumm
spellingShingle Alexander Stumm
Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and Desertec
Ardeth
Atlantropa
Desertec
energy infrastructure
ecomodernism
Herman Sörgel
author_facet Alexander Stumm
author_sort Alexander Stumm
title Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and Desertec
title_short Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and Desertec
title_full Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and Desertec
title_fullStr Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and Desertec
title_full_unstemmed Neo-colonial Continuities in the Mediterranean Infrastructure Projects of Atlantropa and Desertec
title_sort neo-colonial continuities in the mediterranean infrastructure projects of atlantropa and desertec
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
series Ardeth
issn 2532-6457
2611-934X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Herman Sörgel’s gigantic project “Atlantropa” is a prominent European project in terms of infrastructure and territory in the first half of the 20th century. It is an example of a modernity that is necessarily believing in progress through technology – as will be shown the first section of this essay, but it is also profitable in that it historically locates Europe’s current energy policy infrastructure projects in Africa, to which the second section of the essay is dedicated. The vision pursued under the name Destertec envisages the large-scale implementation of renewable energy power plants, especially solar thermal power plants in Northern Africa. Both projects share an unshakeable belief in ecomodernist ideas, meaning the solution of socio-economic and ecological challenges through technology (Gall, 2014). Furthermore, argumentation patterns of the 1920s based in colonial ideology of a Pan-Europa or Eurafrica still serve to advertise development programs in the 21st century. The historical perspective with an overview about “Atlantropa” thus serves as a mean to question justifications of recent European energy projects in Northern Africa.
topic Atlantropa
Desertec
energy infrastructure
ecomodernism
Herman Sörgel
url http://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/1883
work_keys_str_mv AT alexanderstumm neocolonialcontinuitiesinthemediterraneaninfrastructureprojectsofatlantropaanddesertec
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