We are a research collective that aims to shed light on the imperial logics embedded in extractive activities in the North Sea and to develop a comprehensive research agenda for rethinking extractive activities in the region by considering the North Sea as a site of Northern European imperial ambitions.
The starting point for this initiative is the premise that North Sea activities are deeply influenced by imperial logics and practices, necessitating a re-evaluation of the North Sea as a frontier space intimately connected with the practices and logics of exploitation and expropriation developed in the former European colonies. These imperial logics, practices, and actors laid the foundation for transforming the North Sea into an extraction frontier from during the 20th century into the 21st. Applying the concept of imperialism to the North Sea's extractive history does not equate the region's activities with the atrocities committed by imperial powers around the world.
Instead, this initiative wishes to examine how the North Sea emerged as an extractive frontier, especially in the postwar world order, through for instance, the geo-politics, capital, knowledge, material, and technologies of European imperial enterprises.
The Ghosts of Empire in the North Sea research collective is a collaborative platform to enable multidisciplinary research across the social sciences and humanities that explores the continuities of imperial logics, practices and actors in the development of North Sea extraction past, present, and future.
As a research collective we have no PI or lead researchers. The research collective lives through its members and their engagement and collaboration with artists, writers, social movements, etc. is also highly appreciated. So, if you want to get involved please let us by contacting Associate Professor Anders Riel Müller.
*The initiative is partly funded by a grant from the Green Transition Seed Fund at UiS.
Projects
This paper explores the material and discursive practices of frontier-making in the North Sea and Swedish North, focusing on territorial control and the framing of these regions as empty, wild, ripe for exploitation, but also as spaces to which hope is attached. Rather than seeing these regions as part of the North-Western Europe core, the paper approaches them as frontier spaces for Europe. Historically, these areas have been depicted as pioneering zones offering hope for profits, development, and jobs. While past literature views these spaces as permanent or reconfigured frontiers, we argue that green industrial expansion rearticulates their frontier status, that allows for a new cycle of extraction and sacrifice. This project reframes frontier-making as a multi-stage process, building on previous phases but rethinking the frontier characteristics of these regions with each phase. We are especially interested in examining the affective dimension of frontier-making, particularly the role of hope in driving both local development aspirations and the pursuit of profit to legitimize extractive activities.
Researchers: Anders Riel Müller & Georgia de Leeuw
From the depths of the North Sea, fossil fuels have been extracted for decades. Where oil and gas have been brought to the surface, barrels with nuclear waste were sunk to the grounds of the very same depth. With a half-a-century history of radioactive waste disposal in the North and Irish Sea, British and other West European nuclear waste politics have followed the logics of dilution as solution: casted in cement and packed in barrels, radioactivity has been moved from the surface to the grounds of the sea. The dumping of –mostly low and intermediate– radioactive waste by European energy companies with governmental permission rendered the area of the North Sea ‘empty’ and with it its organism and seabed worthless, a process the historian Traci Brynne Voyles has conceptualised as wastelanding. Wastelanding the North Sea explores the perceptions, practices, and conflicts of and around radioactive waste disposal in the North Sea.
Researcher: Melina Antonia Buns
Famously, the colonisation of much of the extra-European world was conceived and conducted not through the direct actions of state, but of semi-sovereign proxies: the so-called ‘great chartered companies’. These organisations held royal charters and thus privileged rights to conduct trade and facilitate settlement in specific regions over specific time periods. Chartered companies were the mechanism by which the great financial risks inherent to overseas expansion was mitigated and capital raised from private investors. It was also how the imperial interests of governments aligned with those of the financial, merchant, and industrial elites: creating colonial bridgeheads in the periphery and vested interests in the metropole. Interests that in turn would exert significant influence upon imperial policymaking.
The sheer weight of the capital and technology requirements of developing offshore oil and gas reserves revived the public-private model over the 1960s-70s. In the decades that followed discoveries of hydrocarbons in the North Sea basin, its littoral states, themselves often former colonial powers, established a network of national oil companies (NOCs) as central constituents of their systems of petroleum governance. Like their imperial forebears these companies held privileged concessionary rights, not over territories or trade but over production licenses. This would ensure direct state participation in the extractive activities, facilitate knowledge transfers from the private international oil companies, capture contracts for domestic industries and maximise the license-issuing states’ fiscal revenues. As the national oil companies matured, they also developed interests of their own which diverged from that of their state owner, and they sought to use their new positions of power to inter alia influence energy policy.
Whilst scholars have studied the emergence of Western NOCs through a postcolonial prism, for instance how OPEC offered inspiration for the Norwegian system of resource governance, these semi-sovereign companies have not been examined in conjunction with their colonial predecessors. By researching private and national oil companies such as British National Oil Company (BNOC), Statoil, BP or Royal Dutch Shell in conjunction with the ‘great chartered companies’ this study hopes to uncover key continuities between the colonial mode of capitalism and the imperial character of the extractive industries that emerged in the North Sea.
Researcher: Jonas Fossli Gjersø
When the Russian-owned Nord Stream pipelines blew up in September 2022 with no obvious perpetrator, blame, rumour, and conspiracy proliferated in both the media and online. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine seven months earlier meant that the West pointed the finger squarely at the Kremlin, whilst Russia launched a counter-claim back; a revival of Cold War grievances. As a result of the damage, gas prices in Europe shot up by 12% and Norway increased the security around its oil infrastructure. In the two years since the war in Ukraine began, Norway has seen its profits from North Sea oil and gas exports to Europe increase nearly fivefold. It is unlikely that either Nord Stream will ever become operational again due to seawater corrosion.
Our research into the Nord Stream sabotage investigates the ensuing complex geopolitical situation through a commitment to the process of leakage: both materially and discursively. Not only do marine environments – the North Sea and Baltic Sea – offer new ways to think through territory and infrastructure, but they are also vectors to reimagine how information emerges, travels and is understood. Leakage demonstrates how attempts to keep matter and information contained – or submerged – will invariably fall apart.
Researchers: Charlotte Alexandra Wrigley & Sebastian Lundsteen Nielsen
This project looks at the historical heritage of oil and gas extraction in the North Sea as an imperialist expansion that colonises the sea to cater for a capitalist hunger for natural resources. With the climate and nature crisis looming large on the horizon, a range of new activities are initiated in the sea. Alongside the continued expansion of fossil-fuel extraction, deep-sea mining, offshore wind parks, energy islands, power cables, are introduced into the sea.
Within this context, this project engages with Derrida’s work on hauntology and Critical Fantasy Studies to explore how ghosts of imperial adventures past might be haunting Norway’s activities in the North Sea. The empirical material includes medialised debate in national and regional hybrid media and fiction and non-fiction portrayals in Norwegian TV and film. We see that the glorification and naturalisation of “the Oil adventure” conjures a spectral presence – a “ghost”. This ghost that haunts Norway, and Stavanger in particular, is tied to the hero worship of oil “pioneers” at the North Sea “frontier”. We see similar narratives with similar characters appear in new-old settings with seabed mining, offshore wind, etc., where the pioneer worship and fantasies can live on in a new guise.
Researchers: Liv Sunnercrantz & Jens K. Fisker
The development of the oil and gas industry in the North Sea from the 1950s and 60s onwards took place against the backdrop of decolonisation. At the time when European states lost control of petroleum resources in the Middle East and elsewhere, a new source of energy was developed closer to home. This project examines an important precondition for this development – the division of the North Sea among the bordering states. The project will examine the legal negotiations of the division of the North Sea and the related legal regime of the Law of the Sea. Who participated in making these decisions? Which underlying norms, principles and values influenced the procedures of the negotiation process? How did imperial legacies and the context of decolonisation shape the process and the outcome? Through an examination of historical documents, the project seeks to answer these questions and thus to contribute to our understanding of the North Sea as an imperial project.
Researcher: Ellen Ravndal
How do the solar, lunar, and geothermal transitions of the ocean transform not only each other, but also the cultural, economic, and scientific structures that depend on them? And what are the implications of the ocean’s endless material interconnections and temporal intersections for the ways in which we give meaning to, value, and know our worlds? Across four chapters organized by distinct energetic processes, this dissertation traces the mediation and extraction of hydrothermal vents, tides, waves, and upwelling across contemporary art practices, climate sciences, and ocean energy companies.
Researcher: Aster Hoving
The Netherlands and its empire are a key context to understand global carbonization. Shell was founded in colonial Indonesia and used its colonial profits to start extractive projects in new territories. When Indonesia nationalised (parts) of the oil industry, the Dutch discovered a gas field in the Dutch province of Groningen. The field, one of the largest of Europe, kicked off the search for oil and gas in the North Sea. In the context of this research collective, my research revolves around tracing the connections between the decolonization of the Indonesian oil industry and the rise of gas extraction in the Netherlands. I map the flows of the people, practices, and capital from Indonesia to the Netherlands at the moment of decolonization and seek to show how these flows enabled and shaped the rise of gas extraction.
Researcher: Marin Kuijt
States and non-governmental agencies use space-based systems for data collection, mapping, communication, reporting, navigation, and research. While space is becoming more privatised, historically satellite constellations (several satellites working together as a system) are omnipresent instruments of authoritarianism and capitalism, defining laws and norms of acceptable and appropriate behaviour. As regimes, they have shaped the fabric of international relations, setting rules for spectrum access, forming technical standards, the establishment of multilateral agencies, and contribute billions to national economies. from the viewpoints of their respective creators, Constellations, as metaphorical Gods looking over humanity, represent the values and belief systems of the creators who made and launched them. They sustain and shape ideology and laws; they influence decisions, actions, and define rights from wrongs.
Imperial practices, which have historically incorporated certain forms of quasi-religious control, are exercised beyond the traditional ‘horizontal’ sphere, but vertically, combined with other electromagnetic emitters, at different layers of atmospheric and subterranean places. Vertical colonialism involves satellites, stratospheric systems, drones, surface-based systems, to undersea, and subterranean perimeter detection and cyber-physical systems.
The aim of this project is to develop a conceptual understanding of colonialism from a vertical perspective, considering how quasi-religious values are exercised from the perspectives of different ‘civilizations’ who own and operate satellite constellations, and, beyond space-based systems, considers the ‘depth’ at which this form of imperialism pervades.
Researcher: Tegg Westbrook
Researchers
Department of Safety, Economics and Planning
Department of Cultural Studies and Languages
Department of Cultural Studies and Languages
Department of Cultural Studies and Languages
Department of Media and Social Sciences
Department of Media and Social Sciences
Department of Media and Social Sciences
Department of Cultural Studies and Languages
Department of Safety, Economics and Planning