GEP-Ed colleagues,

My colleague Yaprak Baltacioglu and I are organizing a conference and 
workshop at the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy on the 
governance of minerals for renewable energy on March 26 from 9am to 4pm. 
 If you are attending ISA in Toronto or happen to be near, the below may of 
interest to you.  

Please register for free to participate:  
http://governingminerals.eventbrite.ca

*Governing Minerals for Renewable Energy *
Renewable energy is the best means of bringing global emissions within the 
required 1.5 degrees limit. While this is an imperative technical response 
to climate change, the full cost of renewables needs investigation. 
Specifically, the value chains of minerals used to produce renewable energy 
remains hidden. This event gathers experts, policy makers and the public 
to discuss the sourcing of commodities required to transition to renewable 
energy; examine the environmental and social costs across the life cycle of 
extraction, transport, processing and disposal; and explore the 
accountability mechanisms established by state and non-state groups to 
reconcile these costs. 

Following a morning session with a keynote from Dr. Stephen Lucas, Deputy 
Minister, Environment and Climate Change Canada, and discussion chaired 
by Julie Gelfand, Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable 
Development, Office of the Auditor General of Canada, we will hold an 
afternoon workshop on the governance of the mineral supply chain for 
renewable energy (to support development of wind, solar, and storage 
technologies primarily). There will be five presentations of reports and 
papers, to frame a moderated discussion between all participants to 
brainstorm the big questions in this emerging area. 

Workshop paper and report presentations include: 

• The Growing Role of Minerals and Metals for a Low Carbon Future; John 
Drexhage, lead author (World Bank’s Oil, Gas, and Mining team of the Energy 
and Extractives Global Practice and the Climate Change Group)

• Transnational Governance for Mining and the Mineral Lifecycle; Graeme 
Auld (Carlton University), Michele Betsill (Colorado State University), and 
Stacy D. VanDeveer (University of Massachusetts)

• Green Conflict Minerals: The fuels of conflict in the transition to a 
low-carbon economy; Clare Church and Alec Crawford (International Institute 
for Sustainable Development)

• The True Cost of Renewables: Governing the supply chain of green 
minerals; Craig Johnson (University of Guelph), Teresa Kramarz (University 
of Toronto), Susan Park (University of Sydney)

• Public supply chain-related laws: The case of ‘conflict’ resources and 
the DR Congo; Lena Partzsch (University of Freiburg)

The goal of the workshop is to set up an agenda that can help guide future 
avenues of scholarly research, policy analysis and recommendations.

Best

Teresa




Teresa Kramarz, PhD 
Director, Munk One Foundation Program
Co-Director, Environmental Governance Lab
Associate Professor and Research Associate in Global Affairs
Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, University of Toronto 
315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON M5S 0A7

Email: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Personal Website: www.teresakramarz.com
Environmental Governance Lab: www.munkschool.utoronto.ca/egl
Global Classrooms Website: www.ourglobalclassrooms.com
Tel: (416) 946-8825, Fax: (416) 946-8877

Just published: Global Environmental Governance and the Accountability 
Trap. Susan Park and Teresa Kramarz, eds. 2019, MIT Press.
More information: 
https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/global-environmental-governance-and-accountability-trap

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