The apparent consumption of coal in Latin America, 1841-2000. A history of progress and frustration

Authors

  • César Yáñez Universitat de Barcelona
  • María del Mar Rubio Universidad de Navarra
  • José Jofré
  • Albert Carreras Universistat Pompeu Fabra

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1344/rhi.v22i53.21000

Keywords:

Coal, Energy, Latin America and Caribbean region

Abstract

This article explains the importance of coal for the beginning of modern economy in Latin America and the Caribbean. It provides the methodology for the estimation of coal consumption data for twenty countries from 1856 to 2000, plus Cuba and Chile from 1840. The conclusion is that coal consumption was a matter of the large and medium sized economies (Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Venezuela). The six small Central American republics, all together, never got above the 1% of the regional consumption. The Dominican Republic did not reach 0,5% and Haiti rarely surpassed 0,01% of the coal consumed in the region, a high figure for Bolivia, Ecuador and Paraguay in some years. The exception among the small ones being Uruguay, which behaved as the large ones. What is behind coal consumption in fact was not size but economic backwardness.

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Published

2018-01-10

How to Cite

Yáñez, César, María del Mar Rubio, José Jofré, and Albert Carreras. 2018. “The Apparent Consumption of Coal in Latin America, 1841-2000. A History of Progress and Frustration”. Revista De Historia Industrial — Industrial History Review 22 (53):25-77. https://doi.org/10.1344/rhi.v22i53.21000.