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Bio-Fuelling the Hummer?: The Anthropocene, Techno-Optimism and Innovation in the Transition from Unsustainability

Development
Environmental Policy
Governance
Green Politics
Political Economy
Political Sociology
Political theory
John Barry
Queen's University Belfast
John Barry
Queen's University Belfast

Abstract

An overarching aim of this paper is to offer an informed and critical analysis of the ‘techno-optimism’ which is argued to be at the heart of much of the debate around 'the anthropcene' in general and arguments for 'geo-engineering' in particular. Techno-optimism is understood as an exaggerated and unwarranted belief in human technological abilities to solve problems of unsustainability while minimising or denying the need for large-scale social, economic and political transformation. More specifically, techno-optimism is the belief that the negative environmental and social costs of high-consumption, affluent, consumer societies and associated ways of life within capitalist orthodox economic growth orientated socio-economic systems, can be solved or eradicated through technological innovation and breakthroughs, often expressed as 'a good anthropocene'. The basis proposition seems to be that business as usual can be ‘greened’; a capitalist, growth-based economy can be made more ‘resource efficient’, consumerism less ‘resource intensive’ (and maybe a little bit more ethical). Techno-optimism, to be deliberately provocative, can therefore be described as a ‘biofuel the hummer’ response to the challenges (and opportunities) of the crisis of unsustainability. What I mean by that analogy is the seductive promise and premise of techno-optimism of not questioning or doubting the global status quo (the hummer), hence it’s putative (but entirely false) non-political character. The capitalist, consumerist, growth-based socio-economic system is thus removed from critical analysis (usually on the implicit or explicit assumption of either the normative rightness of this system, or on strategic political grounds that it is naive or utopian to envisage widespread support for a non or post-capitalist consumer system). Techno-optimism and dominate accounts of the anthropocene simply enable a different means (biofuel) to the same ends.