This volume synthesizes energy history in Mexico from pre-Conquest times to the present. It traces human development from a low-energy, sustainable existence to fossil fuel-based non-sustainability.

The book familiarizes readers with different energy sources, what the advantages and disadvantages of each source are, and how the importance of each energy source has changed over time. From early agricultural beginnings and Spanish-introduced energy innovations to the rise of coal and oil, the volume analyzes how evolving energy sources produced sweeping environmental and social change. It also studies economic history from the approach of the emerging field of biophysical economics, recognizing the often-overlooked role of energy in Mexico's development. Linking this development to climate change, the book discusses the ways in which Mexico and the Global South are impacted by this crisis, despite doing little to cause climate change themselves. Later chapters inform readers of how energy issues have shaped U.S.-Mexican relations throughout the twentieth century and into today.

A History of Energy in Mexico will be of value to students of environmental, economic, and Mexican history as well as political scientists, economists, and anthropologists.



Autorentext

Philip L. Russell is an independent historian based in the United States. He is Editor of the Mexico Energy News and has written eight books, six of which are about Mexico. He has also written on Mexico in publications ranging from Mexico City's La Jornada to the New York Times. He was an interpreter for the National Science Foundation's effort to locate monarch butterfly overwintering sites and has led a Sierra Club trip and mountain bike tours to Mexico. Russell twice served as an official Mexican presidential election observer.

Titel
A History of Energy in Mexico
Untertitel
From Cornfields to Solar Farms
EAN
9781040412534
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
16.09.2025
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
20.07 MB
Anzahl Seiten
150