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Editorial: Environmentally just and economically sustainable low-carbon transitions

編集者コメント:環境的に公正で経済的に持続可能な低炭素移行 (AI 翻訳)

Olubayo Babatunde, Kentaka Aruga, Chun Kai Leung, Oluleke Babayomi, John Adebisi, Saheed Gbadamosi

Frontiers in Sustainable Energy Policy📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-04-27#エネルギー転換Origin: Global
DOI: 10.3389/fsuep.2026.1838153
原典: https://doi.org/10.3389/fsuep.2026.1838153
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🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本編集論文は、環境的正義と経済的持続可能性を両立する低炭素移行に関する研究トピックを紹介する。再生可能エネルギーと生態系サービス、制度能力、金融自由化の効果、部門別政策など多様な視点から、脱炭素化が単なる技術的課題ではなく社会技術的変革であることを示す。

English

This editorial introduces a research topic on environmentally just and economically sustainable low-carbon transitions. It synthesizes studies on renewable energy-ecosystem interactions, institutional capacity, financial liberalization, and sector-specific policies, arguing that decarbonization must integrate ecological, economic, and governance dimensions.

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

日本ではGX(グリーントランスフォーメーション)政策が進む中、本論文は公正な移行の重要性を示す。SSBJ開示基準や有報での社会側面の考慮にも示唆を与える。

In the global GX context

Global GX context: This editorial aligns with ISSB and CSRD requirements for just transition disclosure, emphasizing the need to integrate equity and institutional capacity into decarbonization pathways.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides a comprehensive framing for interdisciplinary research on just transitions and identifies key gaps.

🏢実務担当者:Corporate sustainability teams can use insights on policy and financial mechanisms to align transition strategies with equity.

🏛政策担当者:Offers evidence on institutional and financial conditions necessary for socially legitimate low-carbon policies.

📄 Abstract(原文)

The shift to low-carbon energy systems has become a central theme in the international discourse of sustainability due to the pressing necessity to mitigate the impact of greenhouse-gas emissions and protect the socio-ecological stability in the long term. However, decarbonization pathways are being increasingly viewed as critical to climate change mitigation, a growing body of literature highlights that the transition is not strictly technical or economic but also fundamentally normative and needs awareness of issues of justice, equity, and societal effects. More recent studies note that successful decarbonization policies should strike the right balance between the rapid reduction in emissions and institutional capacity, investment patterns, and distributional factors to be able to maintain the long-term developmental results and the ability of the policies to be legitimized (Babayomi et al., 2024). Simultaneously, an increasing body of research on sustainability transition echoes the necessity to implement environmental, economic, and governance aspects of decarbonization to facilitate effective policy formulation and system resilience. Taken together, all these perspectives support the growing view that decarbonization should be seen more as a socio-technical change than a technological one and needs interdisciplinary research and policy alignment of climate goals to social welfare outcomes (Babatunde et al., 2024). This Research Topic "Environmentally Just and Economically Sustainable Low-Carbon Transitions" was hosted to bring together studies that explore the overlapping of these dimensions. The objective was to stimulate studies that would examine the institutional, financial, technological, and sectoral circumstances, in which decarbonization can promote inclusive development and protect ecological systems. Its contributions cut across various geographical settings and schools of thought, such as macroeconomic studies, sector analysis, institutional studies, and ecosystembased evaluations. Collectively, they show that the process of low-carbon neutralization must not be reduced to environmental actions alone, but necessitates multi-factorial elements such as governance institutions, economic motivators, and social relations.One of the key themes of this collection is that environmental integrity is a key consideration in the growth of renewable energy. As such, Ayompe and Egoh (2026) presented a comprehensive review of the use of renewable energy and its interactions with ecosystem services. On one hand, their review supports the hypothesis that renewable energy systems provide significant socioeconomic benefits, such as job creation, improvement of the health of the population, and energy security. However, sustainability can also be associated with ecological trade-offs, such as impacts on land use, biodiversity, and environmental stability. The authors highlight the need to incorporate ecosystem service considerations into energy planning and propose long-term monitoring, adaptive management, and enhanced data systems. Their contribution supports the significance of maintaining systems approach where renewable energy transitions are not considered through the prism of emissions reduction only but also concerning environmental sustainability and communal welfare.One of the contributions was devoted to the impact of sector-specific dynamics on the results of decarbonization. Khan et al. (2025) study the environmental performance of subsectors of the Chinese tourism industry and demonstrate that there is a great range of differences in terms of ecological intensity and development impacts. According to their results, lodging has a disproportionate impact on greenhouse emissions and ecological footprint growth, whereas entertainment activities yield greater profits in human development outcomes. The research also shows that regulatory tools invariably enhance environmental performance, but fiscal tools have inconsistent effects depending on the sector. This work identifies the necessity of differentiated approaches to policy that could harmonize the development of tourism with environmental and developmental goals, by providing a sub-sectoral system of governance.Institution capacity and governance structure can also be key determinants of successful clean transition outcomes. Oladejo et al. ( 2025) explore the adoption of renewable energy in South African local governments focusing on workforce competence and administrative ability in supporting transition policies. Their qualitative data indicates that a significant skill shortage among the municipal officials impedes the potential of local efforts in renewable energy. According to the authors, training programs, stakeholder engagement, and institutional learning mechanisms are all necessary for local governments to leverage renewable energy for economic and social benefits.,. Thus, the failure of transition policies is usually not due to technological barriers alone, but also due to institutional hurdles and implementation capacity gaps.Yuning et al. ( 2024) offer a wider institutional approach in their study, which examined the role of institutional pressure in determining low-carbon innovation policies among manufacturing companies. Their results suggest that environmental management systems are instrumental in mediating the transformation of regulatory pressure into the innovative outcomes, whereas governance heterogeneity and environmental interpretation have a strong impact on firms' responses. The study concludes that the success of decarbonization is based on the internalization of environmental policy signals by organizations and highlights the role of governance design in facilitating the diffusion of innovation.On the macroeconomic level, one of the contributions explored the effect of the financial system and technological development on environmental performance. Li et al. ( 2025) examine how banking liberalization facilitates corporate environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance, based on a quasi-natural experiment due to Chinese policy change that lifted foreign ownership limits. Their findings reveal that financial reform enhances ESG performance by raising transparency, decreasing financing limitations, and curbing managerial short-termism, to a substantial degree. The paper also uncovers the regional spillover effects indicating that financial reforms have the potential to create more systemic benefits in environmental governance. This article emphasizes the role of financial policy in achieving sustainability goals and shows the effects of capital allocation decisions on the environmental behavior of corporations.Hao and Arshad (2025) compare drivers of carbon emission in G5 economies through a single empirical model by incorporating green technology, energy intensity, environmental performance, and economic growth. Their study reveals that in higher emission contexts, green technological development and economic development can help reduce emissions, with the possibility of environmentally sustainable development paths. Nevertheless, the research also indicates that increasing energy intensity and inadequate effectiveness of the existing environmental policy can continue to frustrate the mitigation processes. These outcomes highlight the importance of policy frameworks that integrate the support of innovation, energy efficiency, and institutional reform.Ullah and Lin (2025) expanded macro-level analysis by testing the impacts of technological cooperation, grants, and energy depletion on the environmental sustainability in Pakistan. Their findings reveal that international technological collaboration, through ecological capacity enhancement, has a major positive impact on environmental safety, whereas industrialization and resource decimation damage the environment. This paper suggests the significance of cross-border collaboration, technology transfer, and aligned policy frameworks in sustainable transitions for emerging economies.Liang and Qiao (2025) provides another institutional-development framework, comparing the impact of low-carbon city pilot policies in China on common prosperity. They analyze that such policies have a range of positive effects related to the quality of employment and the establishment of human capital, leading to an inclusive development outcome. However, the effects are region-specific and are reflected over the long term, which implies that institutional adjustment and regional economic structure have a significant influence on the transition benefits. The authors argue that dynamic policy evaluation systems, region-specific implementation strategies, and enhanced interregional coordination are required to ensure that low-carbon urban transformation supports equitable development.Collectively, the articles in this Research Topic illuminate several valuable insights. First, they show that environmentally just transitions involve incorporating ecological views into technological and economic planning instead of environmental protection being a peripheral goal. Also, they demonstrate that climate policies need to be matched with financial systems, industrial organization, as well as development of the labor market to be economically sustainable. Furthermore, the collection highlights the key role of institutions in mediating the outcome of transition. Coherence in governance, clarity in regulations, and administrative capacity influence the process of implementing and maintaining policies, which can frequently define whether technological opportunities will bring changes in a meaningful manner.In addition to these findings, the Research Topic also indicates other significant future research directions. Integrated analytical frameworks that can connect environment performance, economic sustainability and social equity under one assessment framework are essential. Enhanced metrics of distributio

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