Critical Minerals, Sustainability, and the Energy Transition in the Global South: A Justice Perspective
By (Author) Susan Nakanwagi
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
14th November 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Comparative law
Law: Human rights and civil liberties
346.04685
Hardback
216
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book addresses the relationship between efficient management of critical minerals and sustainability in the Global South, including Sub-Saharan Africa. Critical minerals are essential raw materials for the technologies that are pivotal in today's energy transition. However, critical mineral host states and communities face social, economic, ecological, political, technological, and governance injustices. The book contends that the criteria currently used in assessing criticality and critical mineral development do not fulfil the sustainable development ambitions of developing countries and that broader considerations must be taken into account to include the stakeholders involved as well as the spatial dimension of the critical mineral value chain. In particular, the book argues that the law must consider the broader context in which minerals become critical to particular processes. It positions this argument within the current context of climate change, the just energy transition, the minerals-energy nexus, and geopolitical tensions. By analysing the copper-cobalt value chain through case studies on DRC, Zambia, China, and the EU, the book provides new avenues for critical mineral development and acknowledges the necessity for sustainability amidst the exacerbated impacts of climate change. Addressing a key challenge of the global energy transition, the book argues for a just holistic framework, which includes parameters such as domestic value addition, human rights in business development, environmental sensitivity, the development of communication channels from remote marginalised communities to international policymakers, and the re-designing of criticality considerations beyond supply and economic aspects.
Susan Nakanwagi is Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, Nkumba University, Uganda and Honorary Research Fellow at the School of Humanities, Social Sciences & Law, University of Dundee, UK.