Editorial: Just energy transitions for Europe and beyond
Asmaa Khadim, Nariné Ghazaryan, Vlado Vivoda, Natalie Ralph
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本編集論は、欧州およびその先の公正なエネルギー移行を多角的に分析する。EUの公正移行メカニズムと学術文献の比較、CSDDDによるリチウム採掘の人権リスク評価、オランダ農家の窒素政策への反応、化石燃料産出国の構造的不公正、グリーンランドの鉱物外交と歴史的連続性を論じ、移行における正義の構築と制約を明らかにする。
English
This editorial examines just energy transitions for Europe and beyond through multiple lenses: comparing EU institutional discourse with academic literature on just transition, analyzing the CSDDD's impact on lithium extraction in South America, studying Dutch farmers' perceptions of injustice in nitrogen policy, addressing structural injustices in fossil fuel-producing countries, and exploring mineral diplomacy in Greenland. The collection reveals how justice is constructed, constrained, and reimagined in transition governance.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本でもGX推進に伴う地域的・社会的公正の議論が重要になりつつある。本稿はEUの事例を通じて、政策設計と正義の概念の乖離、サプライチェーン上の人権リスク、産油国の構造的課題など、日本が国際的なGX戦略を検討する上で示唆に富む。
In the global GX context
This editorial provides a comprehensive framework for understanding justice in energy transitions, relevant to global debates on just transition mechanisms, supply chain due diligence, and equitable burden-sharing. It highlights gaps between policy and scholarly discourse, offering insights for international climate governance and corporate sustainability initiatives.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Scholars studying justice in energy transitions will find a multi-level analytical framework synthesizing institutional, legal, and social dimensions.
🏢実務担当者:Corporate sustainability teams can learn from the analysis of due diligence directives and supply chain justice, particularly regarding critical minerals.
🏛政策担当者:Policymakers in Japan and elsewhere can gain insights on integrating justice into transition policies, including stakeholder engagement and international burden-sharing.
📄 Abstract(原文)
examined. In doing so, it treats justice as both an analytical category and a governance problem. Rather than treating justice as an assumed virtue of decarbonisation, the contributions examine how it is constructed, where it is limited, and how it may be re-imagined in light of contemporary transition dynamics. The contributions move across levels of analysis, from conceptual clarification and legal design to social contestation and geopolitical restructuring, revealing how justice is constructed and constrained in practice. The contributions also touch upon various dimensions of environmental and climate justice, including their distributive and procedural dimensions. 4 A first step in this endeavour is not merely to endorse "justice" as a goal, but to understand how it is constructed across the domains that shape transition governance. Chiara et al. approach this by comparing two discursive arenas that do not always speak fluently to one another: institutional texts associated with the EU's Just Transition Mechanism, and a corpus of scientific literature on energy and environmental justice published between 2020 and 2023. Using thematic analysis, they identify three overarching dimensions through which "just transition" is articulated -its focus (including the levels of abstraction at which problems are framed), its justice claims (the forms and dimensions of justice that are made salient), and its actors (who appears as a relevant stakeholder, with what agency, and in what relationships). Their comparison shows that institutional discourse is more strongly organised around economic-financial stances and tends to privilege distributive and restorative understandings of justice, whereas the scientific literature more consistently foregrounds social stances and emphasises recognition and procedural dimensions. This divergence matters because policy design is shaped by the dominant interpretive frame: whether justice is treated primarily as compensation, participation, or structural transformation influences both instrument choice and institutional architecture. Yet the article also highlights cross-cutting threads that complicate a simple binary: across both arenas, a prevailing critical discourse interrogates policy and governance shortcomings, calls for more inclusive treatment of Global South actors and their agency, and points to the importance of strategies for public engagement and resilience. The comparison suggests that without sustained dialogue between scholarly critique and institutional design, "justice" risks becoming administratively operational yet normatively diluted.If conceptual foundations establish the terrain, the other contributions test justice claims against concrete policy realities. The contribution by Preller Bórquez et al. interrogates the external justice implications of Europe's decarbonisation agenda through a focused legal analysis of the EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD). By examining lithium extraction in Bolivia and Chile, the authors explore how the mineral foundations of renewable energy systems intersect with risks of forced displacement and environmental degradation in resource-rich regions. Situating their analysis within business and human rights frameworks and extractivism scholarship, 5 they assess whether the CSDDD's due diligence obligations can identify and mitigate displacement-related harms in complex supply chains. The study reveals both the promise and the limitations of regulatory due diligence as a tool for preventing the externalisation of socioenvironmental costs. In particular, it highlights the structural asymmetry between regulatory ambition in consumer markets and enforcement capacity in extraction sites. Justice, in this framing, requires not only ambitious climate targets but enforceable mechanisms that meaningfully address human rights risks embedded in critical mineral extraction, ensuring that the EU's climate objectives do not inadvertently reproduce socio-environmental injustice elsewhere.Justice, however, is not only a matter of transnational regulation; it is also lived and contested domestically. The examination of Dutch farmers' responses to nitrogen reduction policy in Upham et al. explores how publicly circulating social representations in national newspapers reflect perceptions of injustice in the context of sustainability transitions. Using social representations theory, the authors analyse media discourse to identify recurring themes, including ongoing uncertainty about policy impacts, diminishing public sympathy, feelings of not being listened to by decision-makers, and concern for the future of farming, often accompanied by anger. Rather than evaluating the material justice of the policies themselves, the article treats these representations as indicators of how affected actors make sense of transition pressures and of what sociotechnical transitions scholars describe as "regime resistance." In this respect, perceived injustice operates as a political resource, shaping mobilisation dynamics and influencing the durability of transition coalitions. This approach highlights how perceptions of procedural exclusion and lack of recognition can frame legitimate grievances and shape political and emotional responses. It shows that even when policies may be distributively defensible on paper, they can falter in practice if they fail to engage meaningfully with the identities, histories and public narratives of those whose livelihoods are at stake, underscoring the inseparability of legitimacy and recognition in transition politics.The collection further expands its scope to interrogate justice in the global restructuring of energy economies. The contribution on fossil fuel-producing countries by Ediger challenges the implicit asymmetry in many transition narratives and legal frameworks that foreground decarbonisation within importing economies while paying insufficient attention to the structural dependencies of exporting ones. Ediger argues that contemporary climate and energy governance frameworks -including those embedded in international energy law and EU transition discourse -largely centre on emission reductions within importing economies, while offering limited normative guidance for countries whose fiscal revenues, employment structures and public welfare systems depend on fossil fuel exports. Rather than treating this as a purely economic adjustment problem, the article frames it as a structural justice issue within global energy governance. The 5 Svampa, M. (2019). Neo-extractivism in Latin America: Socio-environmental conflicts, the territorial turn, and new political narratives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Gudynas, E. (2013). Extractivisms: Tendencies and consequences. In M. Lang and D. Mokrani (eds.), Beyond Development: Alternative Visions from Latin America (pp. 61-86). Amsterdam: Transnational Institute.argument implicitly challenges the territorial bias of much just transition scholarship, which often centres importing economies while marginalising producer-state vulnerability. It argues that prevailing transition narratives risk reallocating the burdens of decarbonisation disproportionately onto producer states, without adequately recognising their development claims, sovereign rights over natural resources, or legitimate expectations of economic stability. By critically analysing the distribution of rights and responsibilities in existing legal regimes, Ediger contends that a credible global just transition must incorporate mechanisms for diversification support, institutional reform and equitable burden-sharing. Justice, in this account, requires recalibrating the normative architecture of global energy law so that producer countries are not rendered collateral damage in the pursuit of net-zero goals -a concern that resonates with broader debates on climate justice and equitable burden-sharing in international lawfoot_2 , and energy geopolitics. The latter draws attention to the volatile phase where fossil fuels and new clean energy systems coexist and compete, in a 'messy mix'. Fragile fossil fuel producer economies, heavily dependent on fossil fuel rents, will face politico-economic instability, and less capacity to shield their populations from the costs of the transitionfoot_3 .Finally, the perspective on mineral diplomacy in Greenland by Hale and Ali situates contemporary transition dynamics within longer histories of extraction and geopolitical engagement. By revisiting the case of the Ivittuut cryolite mine and examining renewed interest in Greenland's mineral resources, the authors illuminate how strategic interests, local aspirations and asymmetrical power relations intersect. The historical continuity suggests that energy transition geopolitics does not replace extractive logic but often reconfigures it. Rather than treating Greenland as a passive backdrop to resource extraction, the authors reconstruct how U.S.-European strategic interests, industrial demand and diplomatic negotiations shaped the governance of a critical resource from 1930 to 1987. They then connect this historical episode to the present resurgence of interest in Greenland's mineral wealth (including minerals essential to clean energy technologies), underscoring how external strategic pressures and internal aspirations for autonomy continue to intersect. Through this comparative and historical approach, the article highlights recurring power asymmetries in mineral diplomacy and cautions against patterns in which local agency and resource sovereignty are subordinated to external extraction agendas. It suggests that justice in energy transitions must address not only the distribution of economic benefits, but also decision-making authority and the equitable integration of local and indigenous governance claims into critical mineral governance structures.Taken together, these contributions reveal justice not as
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