Abstract

• Links four decarbonisation pathways to negative impacts and injustices within communities across Africa and Europe. • Shows how these transitions exacerbate vulnerability and inequality. • Research and policy communities need to account for, and seek to minimize, a broader range of injustices. • Sustainability transitions and decarbonisation pathways must become more egalitarian, fair, and just. This study examines the justice and equity implications of four low-carbon transitions, and it reveals the “lived experiences” of decarbonisation as manifested across Africa and Europe. Based on extensive, original mixed methods empirical research – including expert interviews, focus groups, internet forums, community interviews, and extended site visits and naturalistic observation – it asks: How are four specific decarbonisation pathways linked to negative impacts within specific communities? Relatedly, what vulnerabilities do these transitions exacerbate in these communities? Lastly, how can such vulnerabilities be better addressed with policy? The paper documents a troublesome cohabitation between French wineries and nuclear power, the negative effects on labor groups and workers in Eastern Germany by a transition to solar energy, the stark embodied externalities in electronic waste (e-waste) flows from smart meters accumulating in Ghana, and the precarious exploitation of children involved in cobalt mining for electric vehicle batteries in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The aims and objectives of the study are threefold: (1) to showcase how four very different vulnerable communities have been affected by the negative impacts of decarbonisation; (2) to reveal tensions and tradeoffs between European transitions and local and global justice concerns; and (3) to inform energy and climate policy. In identifying these objectives, our goal is not to stop or slow down all low-carbon transitions. Rather, the study suggests that the research and policy communities ought to account for, and seek to minimize, a broader range of social and environmental sustainability risks. Sustainability transitions and decarbonisation pathways must become more egalitarian, fair, and just.

Highlights

  • The Paris climate accords aim to keep global temperature rise well below 2 °C,[1 aspiring to stay below 1.5 °C above preindustrial levels on a path of ‘‘deep decarbonization” (Rockström, 2017; Moberg et al, 2019; Geels, et al, 2017)

  • As the European Commission described itself when justifying a vision for a climate neutral economy in 2018, ‘‘the European Union (EU) has been at the forefront of addressing the root causes of climate change and strengthening a concerted global response in the framework of the Paris Agreement” (European Commission & Planet, 2018)

  • The paper documents and humanizes the troublesome cohabitation between French wineries and nuclear power, the negative effects from solar energy on labor groups and workers in Eastern Germany, the stark embodied externalities in electronic waste (e-waste) flows from smart meters accumulating in Ghana, and the precarious exploitation of children involved in cobalt mining for electric vehicle (EV) batteries in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)

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Summary

Introduction

The Paris climate accords aim to keep global temperature rise well below 2 °C,[1 aspiring to stay below 1.5 °C above preindustrial levels on a path of ‘‘deep decarbonization” (Rockström, 2017; Moberg et al, 2019; Geels, et al, 2017). The EU has already reduced its collective greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from 1990 levels, and is on track to reduce them by 26% below 1990 levels by 2020 (European Environment Agency, 2018). This is no small feat, considering that the EU-28 is responsible for 11.9% of total final energy consumption worldwide, coming after only China and the United States, and it is responsible for 10.4% of global carbon dioxide emissions (Commission, 2019).

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