Several researchers argue that the root cause of today’s ecological disaster is not the anthropos, but the way we have been organizing the global economy through capitalism. It follows that we would be living in the Capitalocene rather than the Anthropocene. In this article, we demonstrate that the Capitalocene concept suffers from four intrinsic flaws, namely: (i) a fuzzy starting date, (ii) its inability to account for non-capitalist political regimes that were equally destructive to the environment, (iii) its incapacity to encompass a potential future with ecological disaster in the absence of capitalism, and (iv) the fact that the large-scale exploitation of nature and man refers to principles broader and older than capitalism. Indeed, we show that for the past two hundred years, capitalism fueled by fossil energy has only accelerated a logic of monopolization of nature whose origin coincides with that of the first empires. As a consequence, we propose to retain the Anthropocene label, but with two amendments: (i) redefining the onset of this epoch in ancient times, and (ii) making the distinction between two sub-epochs, the Agroligarkhian (from 1000 BCE to 1800) and the Thermoligarkhian (from 1800 to the present).
In situations of water shortage and unreliability of the public water supply service, the rehabilitation of old water supply systems could constitute an additional source of supply. The chapter questions both the rationale of their rehabilitation and the state of nowledge associated with their use, based on the example of the old city of Ahmedabad in...
Hydrogen valleys, which integrate renewable energy sources, hydrogen infrastructure, and end-use applications, play a crucial role in decarbonizing industrial energy hubs. However, the large-scale deployment of hydrogen is constrained by limited renewable electricity availability and high technology costs. A key insight from our analysis is that the merit order of hydrogen end-uses is dynamic, evolving...
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