Solar Energy, Modern Slavery and the Just Transition

Solar Energy, Modern Slavery and the Just Transition

Solar Energy, Modern Slavery and the Just Transition

Funder: British Academy Just Transitions within Sectors and Industries Globallyprogramme
Duration: 
November 2021-March 2022
Project Lead: 
James Cockayne
Co-Investigators: 
Edgar Rodríguez-HuertaOana Burcu
Programme: 
Law and Policy

About this project

This project considers how the solar energy sector can best address modern slavery risks. Around 40 per cent of the global supply of polysilicon – a critical component of solar panels – comes from Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, where it is reported to be made with state-sponsored forced labour. And between 15 and 30 per cent of the cobalt in lithium-ion batteries used widely to store solar energy, including in electric vehicles (EVs), comes from informal mines in Democratic Republic of Congo, where forced and child labour are common.

The project was funded by the British Academy’s Just Transitions within Sectors and Industries Globally programme. It produced a major research report, [Download here PDF‘The Energy of Freedom’?: Solar energy, modern slavery and the Just Transition, which warns that without a clear roadmap to transition to ‘slavery-free’ arrangements, the solar market may split into ‘slavery-free’ and ‘slave-made’ value-chains, raising costs, lengthening roll-out times and slowing decarbonization – without necessarily addressing the underlying drivers of modern slavery. The industry needs a global roadmap to move to a slavery-free footing, the report argues.

The report sets out a new method for estimating the forced labour risk in countries’ on-grid, photovoltaic (PV) solar energy production, along with ideas for international collaboration to combat that risk.

It takes its title from a comment in February 2022 by the German finance minister, Christian Lindner, who described renewables as ‘the energy of freedom,’ saying it could aid energy security in response to the war in Ukraine. But the researchers, who set out a new method of measuring the risk of slavery in individual countries along with a plan for international collaboration to combat it, warn that solar energy risks being seen not as ‘the energy of freedom’, but rather as a driver of modern slavery.

 

Download the full report here PDF

Download a short policy brief here PDF

Visit interactive country profiles estimating forced labour risks in the on-grid, PV production of the top 30 solar-energy producing countries in the world here

Download the press release here

Media Contacts:

–          UK/Europe: Fran Abrams, franabrams0@gmail.com, +44 07939 262001

–          Outside the UK/Europe: james.cockayne@nottingham.ac.uk, +61 0434 538 308