Energy Justice : Re-Balancing the Trilemma of Security, Poverty and Climate Change
Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Author -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1 Global Energy Justice -- Abstract -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Global Energy System -- 1.2.1 Global Energy Production -- 1.2.2 Global Energy Consumption -- 1.3 The Global Energy Trilemma: Energy Security, Fuel Poverty and Climate Change -- 1.3.1 Availability -- 1.3.2 Accessibility -- 1.3.3 Sustainability -- 1.4 Constructing Energy Justice -- 1.4.1 The Emergence of Energy Justice -- 1.4.2 Which Justice? -- 1.5 Developing an Energy Justice Critique -- 1.5.1 Distribution -- 1.5.2 Recognition -- 1.5.3 Procedures -- 1.6 Towards an Energy Justice Framework for Assessing High- and Low-Carbon Energy -- 1.7 Summary -- References -- Chapter 2 Fossil Fuels and Energy Justice -- Abstract -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Availability: Reserves, Production and Security -- 2.3 Accessibility: Consumption, Trade Flows and Price -- 2.4 Sustainability: Carbon Dioxide Emissions and Long-Term Trends -- 2.5 Distributional Justice and Fossil Fuels: Where Produces, Consumes and Emits Carbon? -- 2.5.1 Where Are the Resources Located? -- 2.5.2 Where Does Consumption Take Place? -- 2.5.3 Where Emits Carbon Dioxide Emissions? -- 2.6 Recognition Justice and Fossil Fuels: Who Does Not Benefit, Have Access or Emit Carbon? -- 2.6.1 Who Does Not Benefit from the Resources? -- 2.6.2 Who Cannot Access? -- 2.6.3 Who Does not Emit? -- 2.7 Procedural Justice and Fossil Fuels: How We Make Production or Consumption Decisions -- 2.7.1 How Are Production Decisions Made? -- 2.7.2 How Are Consumption Decisions Made? -- 2.7.3 How Long Term Are the Policy Structures? -- 2.8 Summary-The Dominance of Suppliers and Associated Logics of Injustice -- References -- Chapter 3 Alternative Energy Sources and Energy Justice