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How can climate justice and energy justice be reconciled?

In: Handbook of the International Political Economy of Energy and Natural Resources

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  • Andrew Lawrence

Abstract

The chapter advances the argument that policies promoting renewable energy versus carbon-based technologies can simultaneously realise maximal gains from three types of opportunity cost calculations. To the extent that they reduce GHG emissions per capita while increasing energy access, they maximize climate justice. To the extent that they increase energy access for underserved individuals and communities while reducing GHG emissions per capita, they maximize energy justice. And to the extent that either or both types of improvement entail greater scope for meaningful popular participation in the governance of new energy systems in terms of policy design, implementation, and employment, they maximise development goals and human rights, and in particular, the human right to participation. The chapter uses insights from grid decentralisation and political decentralisation in order to illustrate these three claims.

Suggested Citation

  • Andrew Lawrence, 2018. "How can climate justice and energy justice be reconciled?," Chapters, in: Andreas Goldthau & Michael F. Keating & Caroline Kuzemko (ed.), Handbook of the International Political Economy of Energy and Natural Resources, chapter 16, pages 227-237, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:15812_16
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