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Publication - Towards a Just Energy Transition: Implications for Communities in Lower- and Middle-Income Countries

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Title
Towards a Just Energy Transition: Implications for Communities in Lower- and Middle-Income Countries
Publisher
OXFAM
Author
Bobson, Blandina Buenaventura Goldman, Marianne Chauke, Nkateko Dabi, Nafkote Dalabajan, Dante Fadzai Zano, Veronica Farr, Jason Gomez Correa, Laura Victoria Gomez Ortiz, Leandro Haq, Oskar Khoirun Ni’mah, Siti Martinez Arellano, Pilar Mayne, Ruth Mojica Enciso, Sandra Patricia Ocharan, Jacobo Priego, Karla Qazzaz, Hadeel Romero, Jorge Rosario Felizco, Maria Socci, Ludovica Ushie, Henry
Published in
December 2022
Abstract
More frequent or intense floods, heatwaves, wildfires, droughts and typhoons devastate people’s homes, livelihoods and the natural world. A clean energy transition is urgently needed to reduce carbon emissions and prevent the impacts worsening. Wealthy countries have the prime historic responsibility for the climate crisis and therefore for its mitigation. But as the clean energy transition gathers speed, it inevitably also impacts lower-income, lower-emitting countries and communities. This research report, written by 20 co-authors from Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, the US and Europe, investigates the implications of the energy transition for them, and asks how the world can achieve a truly just, as well as fast, transition. The findings highlight the stark choice facing humanity. If the transition is undertaken with justice and respect for communities’ rights at its heart, it offers an unprecedented opportunity to simultaneously mitigate the climate crisis and reduce poverty and inequality. Conversely, an unjust transition, which entrenches or exacerbates inequalities, risks generating public resistance and slowing the transition with devastating human consequences.
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