The Blind Spots of the Green Energy Transition | Olivia Lazard | TED
Summary
TLDRThe speaker addresses the complex intersection of decarbonization, international security, and conflict resolution. While decarbonization is vital for a climate-safe future, it requires intensive mineral extraction, which could exacerbate geopolitical tensions and environmental degradation. The demand for critical minerals like lithium and cobalt is rapidly increasing, raising concerns about resource exploitation in fragile regions. To avoid escalating conflicts, the speaker advocates for science-driven mining policies, global cooperation, and innovation in circular economies. Ultimately, peace and ecological integrity are essential for a sustainable, climate-safe future.
Takeaways
- 🌍 The speaker highlights the connection between decarbonization and international security, emphasizing the blind spots we face during the energy transition.
- ⚡ Transitioning to a decarbonized future will require large-scale mineral extraction, creating significant geopolitical and environmental challenges.
- 🔋 Renewable energy technologies, such as solar panels, wind turbines, and batteries, are highly dependent on non-renewable materials like lithium, cobalt, and rare earth elements.
- 🌱 Mining for these critical materials can have severe environmental and social impacts, particularly in regions vulnerable to corruption, fragility, and conflict.
- 🇨🇳 China dominates both the extraction and processing of many key minerals, putting it in a powerful geopolitical position as other countries depend on its supply chains.
- 💥 The global scramble for critical resources is already leading to tensions, and mineral-rich countries, often in conflict-prone regions, are at risk of exploitation.
- 🌳 The speaker emphasizes the danger of degrading ecosystems through mining in climate-vulnerable areas, which could further destabilize global security and environmental integrity.
- 🤝 To mitigate these risks, a new global public good regime is proposed, where critical minerals are managed collectively to prevent conflict and ensure sustainability.
- ♻️ The speaker calls for massive investment in circular economy models, reducing the need for new materials through recycling and material substitution.
- 🔧 Innovation should focus on sustainability, with economic activities realigned to respect planetary boundaries, ensuring peace and ecological security as we transition to clean energy.
Q & A
What is the main topic of the speaker's presentation?
-The main topic is the relationship between decarbonization and international security, focusing on the blind spots related to the geopolitical and environmental implications of decarbonizing through mineral extraction.
What does the speaker mean by 'green growth'?
-'Green growth' refers to the idea of decoupling economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions by transitioning to renewable energy technologies, but it also involves recoupling economic growth with intensive mineral extraction to support these technologies.
Why does the speaker argue that the idea of 'renewables being the energy of peace' is less true?
-The speaker argues that while renewables are important for a climate-safe future, the process of acquiring the materials needed for renewable technologies, like mining for lithium and cobalt, can lead to environmental damage, geopolitical competition, and conflict, undermining peace.
What role does China play in the global supply chain for decarbonization materials?
-China dominates the processing of critical minerals like lithium, cobalt, and rare earths. It has positioned itself strategically in the global supply chain, gaining economic and geopolitical power as the world transitions to renewable energy.
Why is the global demand for minerals such as lithium, cobalt, and nickel rising?
-The global demand for these minerals is rising because they are essential for building clean energy technologies like batteries, solar panels, and windmills. As decarbonization progresses, the need for these materials grows exponentially.
What risks does the speaker associate with the 'scramble for resources' in countries rich in critical minerals?
-The risks include corruption, conflict, climate vulnerability, and environmental degradation in countries with rich mineral deposits. Many of these countries are fragile or conflict-affected, which could lead to instability and undermine global security.
How does the speaker link mineral extraction to global geopolitics?
-Mineral extraction influences global power dynamics, as countries with access to critical minerals gain political and economic leverage. The speaker notes that, historically, shifts in energy sources, like coal or oil, have changed global power structures, and a similar shift is happening with minerals for renewable energy.
What solution does the speaker propose for managing mineral resources needed for decarbonization?
-The speaker proposes creating a global public good regime to collectively manage the critical minerals needed for decarbonization, ensuring that countries rich in resources receive adequate support and that competition does not lead to conflict or environmental harm.
What role does science play in the speaker’s proposed plan for decarbonization?
-Science can determine where it is ecologically safe to mine, and where mining should be avoided to protect ecosystems. In areas where mining is allowed, science can help integrate socioeconomic and ecological regeneration into business models.
What is the concept of 'ecological diplomacy' mentioned by the speaker?
-'Ecological diplomacy' is a framework the speaker and their team are promoting, which focuses on addressing ecological integrity as the foundation for global security. It aims to guide foreign policy toward peacebuilding, environmental protection, and sustainable resource management.
Outlines
😓 Introduction: Facing Intimidation and Climate Challenges
The speaker expresses their initial nervousness about the topic and notes their experience in international security and conflict resolution. The discussion focuses on the relationship between decarbonization and conflict, with the central argument being that a climate-safe future is essential for peace. However, the speaker challenges the assumption that renewable energy automatically leads to peace, emphasizing the connection between decarbonization and the extraction of materials required for renewable technologies. This introduces the critical need to address how mining for these materials impacts global security and geopolitics.
⚒️ Mining's Role in Decarbonization and Global Power Dynamics
The speaker explains that achieving decarbonization requires vast amounts of non-renewable materials for renewable technologies like solar panels, windmills, and batteries. Mining for these materials impacts ecosystems and local populations, and the scale of required extraction has significant geopolitical implications. The historical pattern of energy transitions influencing global power is highlighted, using examples like the UK with coal and the US with oil. As we transition to renewable energy, countries rich in critical materials will shape new power dynamics, with China already playing a dominant role in material processing.
🌍 China's Dominance in Mineral Supply Chains
This paragraph focuses on China's dominance in both extraction and processing of critical minerals, such as lithium, cobalt, nickel, and rare earths, which are crucial for renewable energy technologies. The speaker underscores that China's strategic positioning allows it to influence global power dynamics, especially with Europe being heavily dependent on Chinese resources. The potential consequences of this power shift are discussed, noting that it could either lead to a rebalancing of global power or, if mishandled, result in the weaponization of supply chains and further international instability.
🌐 Global Resource Scramble and Geopolitical Tensions
This paragraph connects Russia's invasion of Ukraine with the broader competition for critical raw materials. The war is seen as a reflection of increasing geopolitical tensions tied to mineral-rich regions. The speaker points out that many countries with abundant mineral resources, such as those in Africa, Latin America, and Central Asia, are politically fragile or conflict-ridden. The competition for these resources is leading to a new 'scramble,' raising concerns about how this race could undermine efforts toward peace and sustainable development, especially for nations that are already vulnerable.
🌀 Fragility and Climate Vulnerability in Resource-Rich Countries
The speaker introduces a map showing how many critical mineral deposits are located in countries that are fragile or corrupt. These countries also happen to be climate-vulnerable and home to critical ecosystems that must be preserved to ensure planetary security. The speaker warns of a 'perfect storm' where corruption, fragility, climate disruption, and environmental degradation intersect. This scenario heightens the risk of conflict and insecurity, with global consequences. The speaker emphasizes that while resource-rich countries may face the brunt of these issues, their struggles are interconnected with global security.
🌱 Balancing Decarbonization, Ecology, and Peace
The speaker urges that in the race to decarbonize, we cannot afford to ignore ecological integrity and peace. Drawing lessons from the past, they argue that a shift to new energy systems should not come with the same blind spots that fossil fuel exploitation created. The stakes involve not only achieving a climate-safe future but also ensuring it does not compromise on human rights or environmental health. The speaker stresses that without addressing the unintended consequences of decarbonization, the pursuit of sustainability could exacerbate global insecurity and undermine the future of humanity.
🔬 Four-Part Plan for Sustainable Decarbonization
The speaker offers a four-part strategy to ensure a sustainable, conflict-free decarbonization process. First, science must guide where mining is ecologically safe, with protected areas designated in unsafe zones. Second, a global public good regime should manage decarbonization resources collectively to prevent conflict and promote international collaboration. Third, a shift in business and economic models is required, focusing on reducing energy and material needs through circular economies and ecological assessments of supply chains. Finally, innovation must aim to align economic activity within planetary boundaries, ensuring that decarbonization is ecologically and socially responsible.
🌿 Regenerative Foreign Policy and Ecological Diplomacy
The speaker introduces the concept of 'regenerative foreign policy,' developed by their team at Carnegie Europe. This approach focuses on addressing global economic inequality and promoting peace in the context of decarbonization and ecological regeneration. They advocate for the adoption of 'ecological diplomacy,' a framework that emphasizes ecological integrity as the foundation for global security. The speaker closes by expressing optimism that, with attention to these blind spots, humanity can chart a peaceful and sustainable future in the face of climate change.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Decarbonization
💡Mineral Extraction
💡Renewable Energy
💡Geopolitics
💡Green Growth
💡Supply Chains
💡China's Role
💡Conflict Zones
💡Ecological Integrity
💡Circular Economy
Highlights
Decarbonization requires intensive mineral extraction, which introduces complex geopolitical challenges.
The transition to renewable energy increases the demand for minerals like lithium, cobalt, and nickel, which will surge by 500% by 2050.
China dominates both the extraction and processing of key minerals like rare earths, positioning itself as a central player in global decarbonization efforts.
Access to energy sources has historically shaped geopolitical power dynamics, and the shift to renewable energy will do the same.
Countries rich in mineral resources, especially in Africa, Latin America, and Central Asia, are at risk of exploitation, conflict, and corruption due to resource demand.
Decarbonization must be balanced with ecological integrity to avoid undermining planetary security and escalating conflicts.
Many critical minerals are found in climate-vulnerable or politically unstable regions, posing risks to both resource supply and global security.
Decarbonization without careful management could lead to a new scramble for resources, amplifying geopolitical tensions.
Ukraine, a mineral-rich country, is an example of how resource competition intersects with global conflict, as seen in its invasion by Russia.
A comprehensive decarbonization strategy must include conflict resolution, anti-corruption measures, and support for climate resilience in resource-rich countries.
Future business models should integrate ecological and socio-economic regeneration alongside mining practices.
Circular economy models that emphasize recyclability and material substitution are crucial for reducing the demand for new materials.
Innovation in the future must focus on keeping economic activities within planetary boundaries rather than just creating new products.
Ecological diplomacy is essential to ensuring peaceful and sustainable international cooperation in the age of climate disruption.
To achieve a climate-safe future, peace and international cooperation are just as critical as decarbonization efforts.
Transcripts
Hi.
It's about as intimidating as I thought it would be.
(Laughter)
And yet you’d think or I’d think
that I'd be accustomed to more stressful situations.
You see, I work in international security and in conflict resolution.
And today, I'm here to talk about some of our blind spots
related to decarbonization.
Now, what does one have to do with the other, you may ask.
Good question.
We often hear that a climate-safe future is a necessary condition for peace.
That's true.
We also often hear that renewables could be the energy of peace.
Less true.
To understand, I need to tell you about the materials that we need
in order to decarbonize.
They're pretty.
And they can be deadly.
Looking into their story tells us that confronting conflict
and building new forms of international peace
are going to be critical foundations to build a climate-safe future.
So let me tell you about them,
starting with where we stand now.
When we talk about a decarbonized future,
we generally have in mind the possibility of decoupling economic growth
from greenhouse gas emissions.
That’s what we call “green growth.”
What we tend to think about less often is that to get there
we need to recouple economic growth with intensive mineral extraction.
To harness renewables or renewable energy like the sun and the wind,
we obviously need to build technologies such as solar panels,
windmills, batteries, right?
And to build those,
we need to mine huge quantities of non-renewable materials
such as these.
Knowing that it takes mines as big as these
to produce that much amount of usable material.
Our ticket to green growth, in other words,
is digging deep in the environment.
Now we know that mining can have grave impacts
for local ecosystems and populations.
I’ve seen it myself, and it really isn’t pretty.
But what I want to talk about today
is about how much and where we’re going to have to dig,
and what that means for planetary security and for geopolitics.
I'll start from there.
History tells us
that when the dominant source of energy changes,
power relations change as well.
Countries that can transform energy to their own advantage,
can gain the upper hand economically and politically,
and then can put themselves at the center of the global order.
Think of the United Kingdom and coal, for instance,
or how oil determined the ascendance of the US to a global superpower.
What that tells us is that the access to
and processing of energy
literally materializes into the ability to shape geopolitical power dynamics.
And today,
we're facing the challenge of implementing the biggest energy transition
in the history of humankind
under a ticking climate clock.
The race is on for a new generation of power.
At the heart of which you have all of the critical materials
that we need to decarbonize on the one hand
and digitalize on the other.
So what's happening with them?
On the demand side we're at the beginning of an exponential demand curve.
If you take lithium as a proxy, a key component for [batteries],
global production already increased by just short of 300 percent
between 2010 and 2020.
I'm going to pause here for a sec.
This is really good news.
It means that decarbonization is in motion.
The not so good news is that our "clean" future
is going to be more materially intensive than before.
If you take a simple measure for it,
the International Energy Agency tells us
that with the current level of innovation,
an electric car requires six times more mineral inputs
than a conventional car.
And this is only the start.
The World Bank tells us that with the current projections,
global production for minerals such as graphite and cobalt
will increase by 500 percent by 2050,
only to meet the demand for clean energy technologies.
Now let's look on the supply side.
That's where a lot of really interesting things are happening.
Who currently exploits and processes minerals
and where deposits to meet future demand are located
tell us exactly how the transition is going to change geopolitics.
So if you look at a material such as lithium,
countries like Chile and Australia tend to dominate extraction
while China dominates processing.
For cobalt, the Democratic Republic of Congo dominates extraction
while China dominates processing.
For nickel,
countries like Indonesia and the Philippines
tend to dominate extraction,
while China, you guessed it, thank you,
dominates processing.
And for rare earths,
China dominates extraction while China dominates processing.
I've just said China a lot, didn't I?
Well, that's because China skillfully leveraged
its geo-economic rise to power over the last two decades
on the back of integrating supply chains for rare earths
from extraction to processing to export.
We tend to point fingers at China today
for not going fast enough on its own domestic energy transition,
but the truth is that China understood already long ago
that it would play a central role in other countries' transitions.
And it is.
The European Union, for instance,
is 98 percent dependent on China for rare earths.
Needless to say,
this puts China in a prime position to redesign the global balance of power.
Now, you may argue that this is a good thing
because the global balance of power needs a rehaul anyway.
And you know what?
I can totally roll with that.
But -- and this applies to China, the United States,
and any other big player --
we need to make sure that the redesigning process
doesn't compromise on human rights or open societies.
And that it doesn't lead to the weaponization of supply chains
at a time of international instability, and more importantly,
at a time of complete climate breakdown.
Unfortunately, we're already seeing signs of this happening.
China is currently trying to gain access to more mineral resources
through its Belt and Road Initiative.
The United States and Europe
are both thinking of reshoring critical mining
and processing
and orienting some of their international partnerships
to facilitate access to more mineral resources.
Japan is exploring some of its oceanic marine reserves
to build strategic reserves.
I'm also speaking in the shadow of a war on the European continent.
Now at first sight,
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has nothing to do with what I've been talking about.
But Ukraine happens to be mineral rich.
It also happens to be one of only two countries
that had struck a partnership with the European Union
to diversify and develop supply chains for critical raw materials.
That partnership was specifically designed to help the EU decarbonize
and in the process to better integrate with Ukraine
from a political and economic perspective.
Eight months after the partnership was struck,
the invasion took place.
Now, mineral resources may not explain everything about the war.
But they certainly can't be ignored in analyzing the events.
Because when it comes to the race for critical raw materials,
what's actually happening
is that we're headed right back into a new scramble for resources,
at the heart of which you find all of the big players
eyeing countries with vast mineral deposits.
And yet it's so obvious many of these countries that are located,
for the most part, in Africa,
in Latin America, in Central Asia and in the Indo-Pacific.
Economists will tell you that this is a great thing,
because these countries, or at least a lot of them,
need economic resources and many,
to accelerate their development pathway and climate adaptation.
But.
Many of these countries also have very real overlapping risk profiles.
The International Institute for Sustainable Development
first produced this map back in 2018.
Can you see the green dots on the map?
They represent all of the different materials
that we need in order to decarbonize,
their geographic location and their deposit size.
As it so happens, a lot of the deposits are located in countries
that rank fairly high on corruption indices.
They are represented essentially by the shades of brown and red on the map.
And as it so happens,
a lot of the materials are also located in countries that are fragile,
such as Sri Lanka,
or downright conflict affected, like Myanmar
and the Central African Republic.
That's not all.
The Notre Dame Institute tells us, with this map,
in which you see, again, some red and orange,
that countries that are climate vulnerable
are also the ones that are resource endowed.
And one final thing.
You know those big ecosystems that we need to protect and regenerate
in order to stabilize the global climate regime?
To reboot the hydrological cycle
and to protect biodiversity?
They're also represented in orange and red on this map.
Many of these big ecosystems are located in the same fragile countries
that I was mentioning before.
They also happen to sit on vast mineral deposits.
Changing or eliminating these ecosystems
through mining, through deforestation or anything else
would undermine planetary security.
Not just international security.
Planetary security.
It's essentially like a perfect storm in the making.
Corruption,
institutional and socioeconomic fragility,
climate disruptions and environmental plundering,
all acting as a backdrop
to a competition to gain access to the minerals
that we need in order to decarbonize.
All of these factors will be magnified
if we don't rein in the scramble for resources.
All of them will reinforce one another.
And I want to make something very clear here.
The countries at the heart of the resource scrambling
may suffer the most direct consequences
in terms of their ability to develop, to adapt to climate change
and to avoid violence.
But their fate is not isolated.
Their problems are not geographically distant.
Our big blind spot here
is that we're headed towards a decarbonization trajectory
that may end up undermining ecological integrity
and heighten the risks of conflict and insecurity
whose consequences would reverberate worldwide.
I know that this is not a particularly encouraging picture.
And that it comes on top of layers of pictures
that are not particularly encouraging.
Our modern economies have advanced and grown for two centuries
through the gigantic blind spot of fossil fuel exploitation
and its unintended consequences.
The big lesson here
is that we can't afford to just shift to a different set of energies,
technologies and materials
without paying attention to the unintended consequences.
The stakes are too high.
They involve our future.
That we know.
But they also involve our humanity.
And they involve our nature,
by which I mean the nature that we choose for ourselves.
Decarbonization is the way forward.
There’s not one single doubt allowedd about this.
But the way forward also demands of us
that we start imagining our future beyond decarbonization already.
Remember what I said at the beginning?
A climate-safe future is a necessary condition for peace.
But we won't achieve a climate-safe future without peace.
And to build peace,
we need to shake things up in international politics
and in the way that we do business and economics.
So where do we start?
I'd like to offer the scaffolding of a plan in four different baskets.
First, science.
Science can tell us exactly where it is safe to mine and where it isn't,
from an ecological perspective.
Where it is not safe to mine,
we need to act as though these minerals did not exist
and establish protected areas
under which no mining licensing can take place.
Where mining does take place,
we can integrate socioeconomic
and ecological regeneration within business models.
Second, a global public good regime.
If decarbonization is a matter of human survival,
then the materials that we need in order to decarbonize
should be managed collectively under a global public good regime.
The alternative is conflict and planetary breakdown.
So while we figure out exactly how to design this regime,
the countries at the heart of the scramble for resources
should receive adequate support,
competent and coherent support
to face off the joint challenges of geopolitical competition
and climate disruptions on the other hand.
In other words, investing into conflict resolution,
into the fight against corruption
and into context-specific resilience,
should be top priorities of our global energy transition.
Third,
changing the way that we do business and economics.
We can't just switch from one energy system to another.
I've made that pretty clear, right?
What we need instead
is to reduce our need for energy and for materials.
And that starts with massive public and private investments
into circular economic models
that favor recyclability and material substitution.
Now, here's the thing.
We know that this is a necessary step,
but not a sufficient one.
So what we also need to do
is to develop ecological assessments for supply chains
that account for greenhouse gas emissions,
but also for water, soil, biodiversity, material
and energy footprint all at once.
Only on this all-encompassing basis
will we understand how supply and distribution chains need to change
and therefore how globalization needs to transform.
Fourth,
innovation.
All of this can only happen
if we start shifting our thinking about innovation.
Innovation in our times
is about bringing back economic footprint within planetary boundaries.
Anything else, even the coolest of new products,
if it isn't aligned with that goal, it's not innovation,
it's business as usual.
In our little corner of the world,
my team and I at Carnegie Europe have been working really hard
to identify what regenerative foreign policy looks like
and what it aims for.
There are two things that we know by now.
One is obvious, we need to tackle fundamental issues
around economic redistribution on a global scale.
The other thing is that we need a geopolitical de-escalation
around decarbonisation and regeneration.
We've translated that into a concept we've called ecological diplomacy.
And we're pushing really hard for the European Union
to adopt this framework within their foreign policy.
Because if there is one thing that we've understood,
it's that ecological integrity is the foundation
for all types of security.
Which makes it the one common denominator
that we can work on rebuilding collectively.
And we can manage.
Truly, I believe that we can.
As long as we shed light on our transition blind spots
and take them as our guiding companions
to identify what truly systemic,
truly peaceful
and truly safe solution pathways look like
for the age of climate-disrupted futures.
Thank you so much.
(Applause)
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