Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice

The Paris Agreement and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals clearly demonstrate the need for global energy transitions. Evolving energy generation and the expansion of the renewable energy capacity and associated infrastructure contribute to changing and increasing demands for minera...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kügerl, Marie-Theres, Hitch, Michael, Gugerell, Katharina
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier BV 2023
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/89682
_version_ 1848765269294448640
author Kügerl, Marie-Theres
Hitch, Michael
Gugerell, Katharina
author_facet Kügerl, Marie-Theres
Hitch, Michael
Gugerell, Katharina
author_sort Kügerl, Marie-Theres
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The Paris Agreement and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals clearly demonstrate the need for global energy transitions. Evolving energy generation and the expansion of the renewable energy capacity and associated infrastructure contribute to changing and increasing demands for minerals and metals. The potential negative environmental, social and economic impacts of increased mineral resource production have been contested and are under increasing scrutiny by both academia and civil society. Responsible Sourcing (RS) has become a management approach for companies and policymakers to identify, monitor and address potential negative impacts along their raw materials’ supply chains. Although RS might contribute to sustainability along the supply chain, this paper raises the question of whether it also contributes to Natural Resource Justice (NRJ) in energy transitions. Based on a bibliometric network analysis, this study investigated current narratives of RS literature and to what degree core aspects of NRJ (e.g., distribution of benefits and burdens, power asymmetries, property rights) are reflected in the RS debate following a deductive approach. The results obtained show that compared with other sectors (e.g., timber, food, biomass, textiles) debates on RS in renewable energy-related sectors are still scarce and fragmented. The analysis indicates that different foci are aligned with one or more of the traditional three sustainability dimensions (i.e., environmental, social, economic), while few addressed aspects of NRJ. The authors observed a distinct lack of holistic justice considerations in the current RS debate and only a few individual issues are discussed, such as the detection of burden shifting, accountability for supplier behavior, and sharing of financial benefits. This research contributes to the understanding of different RS approaches and extends the RS discussion to NRJ considerations in energy transitions. It also points out important paths for future research to contribute to just energy transitions.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:32:34Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-89682
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:32:34Z
publishDate 2023
publisher Elsevier BV
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-896822023-01-23T06:57:28Z Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice Kügerl, Marie-Theres Hitch, Michael Gugerell, Katharina The Paris Agreement and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals clearly demonstrate the need for global energy transitions. Evolving energy generation and the expansion of the renewable energy capacity and associated infrastructure contribute to changing and increasing demands for minerals and metals. The potential negative environmental, social and economic impacts of increased mineral resource production have been contested and are under increasing scrutiny by both academia and civil society. Responsible Sourcing (RS) has become a management approach for companies and policymakers to identify, monitor and address potential negative impacts along their raw materials’ supply chains. Although RS might contribute to sustainability along the supply chain, this paper raises the question of whether it also contributes to Natural Resource Justice (NRJ) in energy transitions. Based on a bibliometric network analysis, this study investigated current narratives of RS literature and to what degree core aspects of NRJ (e.g., distribution of benefits and burdens, power asymmetries, property rights) are reflected in the RS debate following a deductive approach. The results obtained show that compared with other sectors (e.g., timber, food, biomass, textiles) debates on RS in renewable energy-related sectors are still scarce and fragmented. The analysis indicates that different foci are aligned with one or more of the traditional three sustainability dimensions (i.e., environmental, social, economic), while few addressed aspects of NRJ. The authors observed a distinct lack of holistic justice considerations in the current RS debate and only a few individual issues are discussed, such as the detection of burden shifting, accountability for supplier behavior, and sharing of financial benefits. This research contributes to the understanding of different RS approaches and extends the RS discussion to NRJ considerations in energy transitions. It also points out important paths for future research to contribute to just energy transitions. 2023 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/89682 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116711 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Elsevier BV fulltext
spellingShingle Kügerl, Marie-Theres
Hitch, Michael
Gugerell, Katharina
Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice
title Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice
title_full Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice
title_fullStr Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice
title_full_unstemmed Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice
title_short Responsible sourcing for energy transitions: Discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice
title_sort responsible sourcing for energy transitions: discussing academic narratives of responsible sourcing through the lens of natural resources justice
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/89682