Megaprojects on ice: lessons from the Kárahnjúkar hydropower project for a Just Transition

Rachael Lorna Johnstone, Karin Buhmann
{"title":"Megaprojects on ice: lessons from the Kárahnjúkar hydropower project for a Just Transition","authors":"Rachael Lorna Johnstone, Karin Buhmann","doi":"10.1080/2154896x.2023.2269691","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTThe Kárahnjúkar dam, power station and aluminium smelter opened in East Iceland in 2007 after many years of debate and discord. It is the largest ever industrial project in Iceland and had national as well as local implications, both responding to and in turn changing public expectations regarding participation, environmental impact assessment and community engagement. As Iceland seeks to harness an increasing supply of renewable energy, questions are raised about what constitutes a just transition in the Icelandic context. The article begins by discussing energy supply and demand, current and projected in Iceland. It then delves into theoretical accounts of just transition. It explores the decision-making process for the Kárahnjúkar project and the longer term impacts on the region before assessing these within the framework of just transition theory. A discussion follows that delivers insights into key aspects of the just transition that can be applied to new projects both in Iceland and further afield. These pertain in particular to employment and community benefits, environmental impact assessment and public participation.KEYWORDS: Just transitionArcticIcelandmegaprojectspublic participationenvironmental impact assessment (EIA) Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 * Field research for this article was funded by a grant under the Nordic Council of Ministers’ Arctic Co-operation Programme for the project Towards a socially just transition in the Arctic: Exploring, theorizing and disseminating best practice in meaningful stakeholder engagement for communities (project number A21751; principal investigator Karin Buhmann). The authors thank the individuals interviewed for their time and the information shared, Ragnheiður Elfa Þorsteinsdóttir, University of Akureyri, for important background research and feedback as the paper developed, and both Ragnheiður and Sanne Vammen Larsen, University of Southern Denmark for their participation and insights during the fieldwork. We also thank the two anonymous reviewers and the guest editor of this special issue for insightful comments and suggestions that enabled us to clarify some of our arguments. All errors remain the responsibility of the named authors.2 “Bechtel. ‘Fjardaál Aluminum Smelter, Iceland’; Alcoa, Citation2021 Samfélagsskýrsla 28–29.3 See, e.g. Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition; Wood-Donnelly and Ohlsson, eds., Arctic Justice; and Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’.4 Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition.5 Ibid.6 International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Citation1966.7 Ragnheiður Elfa Þorsteinsdóttir, University of Akureyri, and Sanne Vammen Larsen, University of Southern Denmark. Both also form part of the wider research team exploring the Kárahnjúkar case as well as some other issues under the research grant noted in the Acknowledgements.8 The interviewees were advised that they would not be named but that, given the small size of Icelandic society, it might be possible for others familiar with the case to identify the source of any statement. In the cases where a direct attribution to an interview source is cited, the participants were given the opportunity to review and correct the text.9 Statistics Iceland, ‘Population’.10 See Martinez Cobo (Citation1987), Study of the Problem of Discrimination, para 379 (for the most commonly referenced definition of Indigenous Peoples).11 Iceland Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs, Störf án staðsetningar.12 National Planning Agency of Iceland, Kárahnjúkavirkjun allt að 750 MW fyrri áfangi allta að 625 MW og síðari áfangi allt að 125 MW (Kárahnjúkar EIA), 36.13 Ibid, 37; see also Statistics Iceland, ‘Hlutur atvinnugreina í landsframleiðslu 1997-2022’.14 Kárahnjúkar EIA, 37.15 Orkustofnun, Energy Statistics in Iceland, 4.16 Benediktsson, ‘Conflicting Imaginaries in the Energy Transition?’; Stober and Bucher, Geothermal Energy, 15–24.17 Iceland Renewable Energy Cluster, ‘Hydropower’, and ‘Geothermal’.18 Green by Iceland, ‘Hydropower’.19 Law on Electricity, 1946.20 See, e.g. Gunnlaugsson, Ólafsdóttir and Óttarson Proppe, Vindorka: Valkostir og greining.21 Orkustofnun, Energy Statistics in Iceland, 6; and Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change, Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 105, 116 and 118.22 Landsvirkjun (Citation2022), Gunnur grænna samfélags, 4.23 Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 27–28; ‘Orkuskiptalíkan’.24 Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 27–28.25 Landsvirkjun, ‘Raunsæ mynd af orkuþörf’.26 Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 52 and 105.27 Ibid, 119.28 Ibid.29 Wang and Lo, ‘Just Transition: a Conceptual Review’; Heffron and McCauley, ‘What is the “Just Transition”?’.30 Wang and Lo, ibid.31 García-García, Carpintero and Buendía, ‘Just Energy Transitions’; Stevis and Felli, ‘Global Labour Unions’.32 Wang and Lo, ‘Just Transition: a Conceptual Review’.33 Stevis and Felli, ‘Global Labour Unions’.34 See e.g. Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition.35 See e.g. Rowell, ‘Sámi Wind Turbine Protest’; Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’.36 Buhmann, et al., ‘Towards Socially Sustainable Renewable Energy Projects’.37 Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition.38 Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’; Wang and Lo, ‘Just Transition: a Conceptual Review’.39 See e.g. Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’; Statsnett SF v Sør-Fosen Sijte and others (Fosen judgment).40 United Nations Human Rights Council, Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.41 United Nations General Assembly, Transforming Our World, art. 67.42 Buhmann, ‘Human Rights and Meaningful Stakeholder Engagement’; Mestad, ‘The Voice of Affected Persons in the OECD Guidelines and Guidance Documents’.43 e.g., Fosen judgment; Kochale and others v Lake Turkana Wind Power Ltd and others.44 e.g., Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’; Buhmann et al., ‘Towards Socially Sustainable Renewable Energy Projects’.45 Nenasheva, et al., ‘Legal Tools of Public Participation’.46 Skorstand, Dale and Bay-Larsen, ‘Governing Complexity’, 28.47 Merrild Hansen and Johnstone, ‘In the Shadow of the Mountain’.48 Skrydstrup and Buhmann, ‘Vært for UNESCO Verdensarv’.49 Bjørst, Sejersen and Thisted, ‘Affective Approaches: Rethinking Emotions in Resource Extraction’, 153.50 Ibid, 146.51 Ólafsson, et al., Áfangaskýrsla I, 25–26.52 Ibid, 20.53 Law on Electricity, 1981; see also, Ólafsson, Áfangaskýrsla I, 20.54 Ólafsson, Áfangaskýrsla I, 22.55 Ibid, 23.56 Ibid, 24; see also, Government of Iceland, Yfirlýsing um Noralverkefnið.57 Ólafsson, Áfangaskýrsla I, 25.58 Ibid, 29–30.59 Ibid, 30.60 Law on Authorisation of Contracts for an Aluminium Smelter in Reyðarfjörður, 2003.61 See, Alcoa, ‘Iceland: Yfirlit’.62 EIA is usually traced back to the US National Environmental Policy Act Citation1969.63 Convention on the Protection of the Environment with Protocol Citation1974; Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context 1991.64 EC Council Directive 85/337/EEC.65 Law on Environmental Impact Assessment, 1993.66 EC Directive 2003/35/EC.67 Law on Environmental Impact Assessment, 1993, article 5(1).68 See, Alþingi, Proposal for Parliamentary Resolution.69 See Alþingi Citation1999.70 Landsvirkjun, Kárahnjúkarvirkjun: framkvænd skilyrða fyrir virkjunarleyfi, 4.71 Information provided by lawyer, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.72 National Planning Agency of Iceland, Kárahnjúkavirkjun allt að 750 MW, 278.73 See, Iceland Ministry of the Environment, Decision overturning the Decision of the National Planning Agency.74 Ibid, 4 and 6.75 Ibid, 6.76 Ibid, 122–124.77 Alþingi, Proposal for Law on the Power Station.78 Law on the Power Station at Jökulsár á Brú and Jökulsár í Fljótsdal and the Enlargement of the Krafla Power Station, 2002.79 Information provided by community representative, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.80 Jóhannesson, Heiðarson and Sigurbjarnarson, Social Impacts of an Aluminium Plant in East Iceland 2002-2008, 11.81 Ólafsson, Rannsókn á samfélagsáhrifum álversog virkjunaramkvæmda á Austurlandi.82 Ibid, 37, image 3.15.83 Ibid, 40–41, images 3.20 and 3.21.84 Ibid, 41–42.85 Information provided by community representative, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.86 Information provided by employee of the National Power Company of Iceland, December 2, 2021.87 Information provided by community representative, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.88 See, e.g. McAfefe, et al., ‘Environmental Solutions Fast-Tracked’; Wright and Tolson, The Value of Early Engagement in Planning.89 Fjarðarbyggð, ‘Fjarðarbyggð í tölum’.90 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 28, table 4.91 Statistics Iceland, ‘Mannfjöldi eftir landshlutum, kyni og aldri 1. janúar 1998-2023’.92 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 29, image 10.93 Alcoa, ‘Jafnréttisstefna Alcoa Fjarðaáls’; see also, Alcoa, Citation2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 29, image 9 (for numbers).94 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 29, image 10.95 Ibid. In 2021, there were 64 women under 30 and 41 men under 30. However, only one year before, the pattern was reversed with 64 female employees under 30 and 89 male employees under 30.96 Alcoa, ‘Jafnréttisstefna Alcoa Fjarðaáls’, 2.97 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 33, table 7; Alcoa, ‘Forstjóri og framkvæmdastjórn Alcoa Fjarðaáls’, (only one of the ten senior management positions is held by a woman).98 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 28.99 Information provided by employee of the East Iceland Nature Research Centre, December 2, 2021.100 Seljan, ‘Alcoa lét undan þrýstingi og borgar jafnvel tekjuskatt strax í ár’.101 Norðurál, ‘Raforkukaup Norðuráls’.102 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 41.103 Statistics Iceland, ‘Hlutur atvinnugreina í landsframleiðslu 1997–2022’; ‘Fjöldi herbergja og rúma á hótelum eftir landsvæðum 2015–2023’; and ‘Gistinætur og gestakomur á öllum tegundum gististaða eftir sveitarfélögum 2008–2021’.104 Merrild Hansen and Johnstone, ‘In the Shadow of the Mountain’, 486.105 Information provided by employee of the Austurbrú, December 2, 2021. Austurbrú is a non-governmental organisation consisting of 30 member organisations. These include local authorities, universities, junior colleges, professional bodies and trade unions.106 Information provided by employee of the National Power Company of Iceland, October 13, 2021; and employee of the National power Company, December 2, 2021.107 Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-Making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters, 1998.108 Landsvirkjun, ‘Sjálfbærni’.109 Information provided by employee of the National Power Company of Iceland, October 13, 2021; see also, Landsvirkun, ‘Skipurit’.110 Information provided by employee of East Iceland Nature Research Centre, December 2, 2021.111 Johnson, Kitchens and Gray, ‘Opinion: Facebook Serves as an Echo Chamber, especially for Conservatives’.112 Information provided by employee of East Iceland Nature Research Centre, December 2, Citation2021.113 Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition; and discussion in section 3 above, accompanying note 37.114 Compare Owen, et al., ‘Fast Track to Failure?’.115 See, e.g. Norton, ‘Achieving Excellence in Public Participation and Consultation’ (on different strategies for effective public engagement).116 Bjørst, Sejersen and Thisted, ‘Affective Approaches: Rethinking Emotions in Resource Extraction’, 153; see also section 3, above.117 See Steenstrup, et al., Visjonsrapport (for an example of town strategic planning based on extensive public engagement in anticipation of a megaproject).118 See, e.g. Austurbrú, ‘Brothættar byggðir’.119 See, e.g. Penny Norton, ‘Achieving Excellence in Public Participation and Consultation’; Skjervedal, ‘Youth as a Resource in Extractive Industry Decision-Making Processes’; Merrild Hansen and Johnstone, ‘Arctic Voices: Strategies for Community Engagement’.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Grant from the Nordic Council of Ministers' Arctic Co-operation Programme [Project No A21751].","PeriodicalId":92151,"journal":{"name":"The polar journal","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The polar journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/2154896x.2023.2269691","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe Kárahnjúkar dam, power station and aluminium smelter opened in East Iceland in 2007 after many years of debate and discord. It is the largest ever industrial project in Iceland and had national as well as local implications, both responding to and in turn changing public expectations regarding participation, environmental impact assessment and community engagement. As Iceland seeks to harness an increasing supply of renewable energy, questions are raised about what constitutes a just transition in the Icelandic context. The article begins by discussing energy supply and demand, current and projected in Iceland. It then delves into theoretical accounts of just transition. It explores the decision-making process for the Kárahnjúkar project and the longer term impacts on the region before assessing these within the framework of just transition theory. A discussion follows that delivers insights into key aspects of the just transition that can be applied to new projects both in Iceland and further afield. These pertain in particular to employment and community benefits, environmental impact assessment and public participation.KEYWORDS: Just transitionArcticIcelandmegaprojectspublic participationenvironmental impact assessment (EIA) Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 * Field research for this article was funded by a grant under the Nordic Council of Ministers’ Arctic Co-operation Programme for the project Towards a socially just transition in the Arctic: Exploring, theorizing and disseminating best practice in meaningful stakeholder engagement for communities (project number A21751; principal investigator Karin Buhmann). The authors thank the individuals interviewed for their time and the information shared, Ragnheiður Elfa Þorsteinsdóttir, University of Akureyri, for important background research and feedback as the paper developed, and both Ragnheiður and Sanne Vammen Larsen, University of Southern Denmark for their participation and insights during the fieldwork. We also thank the two anonymous reviewers and the guest editor of this special issue for insightful comments and suggestions that enabled us to clarify some of our arguments. All errors remain the responsibility of the named authors.2 “Bechtel. ‘Fjardaál Aluminum Smelter, Iceland’; Alcoa, Citation2021 Samfélagsskýrsla 28–29.3 See, e.g. Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition; Wood-Donnelly and Ohlsson, eds., Arctic Justice; and Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’.4 Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition.5 Ibid.6 International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Citation1966.7 Ragnheiður Elfa Þorsteinsdóttir, University of Akureyri, and Sanne Vammen Larsen, University of Southern Denmark. Both also form part of the wider research team exploring the Kárahnjúkar case as well as some other issues under the research grant noted in the Acknowledgements.8 The interviewees were advised that they would not be named but that, given the small size of Icelandic society, it might be possible for others familiar with the case to identify the source of any statement. In the cases where a direct attribution to an interview source is cited, the participants were given the opportunity to review and correct the text.9 Statistics Iceland, ‘Population’.10 See Martinez Cobo (Citation1987), Study of the Problem of Discrimination, para 379 (for the most commonly referenced definition of Indigenous Peoples).11 Iceland Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs, Störf án staðsetningar.12 National Planning Agency of Iceland, Kárahnjúkavirkjun allt að 750 MW fyrri áfangi allta að 625 MW og síðari áfangi allt að 125 MW (Kárahnjúkar EIA), 36.13 Ibid, 37; see also Statistics Iceland, ‘Hlutur atvinnugreina í landsframleiðslu 1997-2022’.14 Kárahnjúkar EIA, 37.15 Orkustofnun, Energy Statistics in Iceland, 4.16 Benediktsson, ‘Conflicting Imaginaries in the Energy Transition?’; Stober and Bucher, Geothermal Energy, 15–24.17 Iceland Renewable Energy Cluster, ‘Hydropower’, and ‘Geothermal’.18 Green by Iceland, ‘Hydropower’.19 Law on Electricity, 1946.20 See, e.g. Gunnlaugsson, Ólafsdóttir and Óttarson Proppe, Vindorka: Valkostir og greining.21 Orkustofnun, Energy Statistics in Iceland, 6; and Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change, Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 105, 116 and 118.22 Landsvirkjun (Citation2022), Gunnur grænna samfélags, 4.23 Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 27–28; ‘Orkuskiptalíkan’.24 Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 27–28.25 Landsvirkjun, ‘Raunsæ mynd af orkuþörf’.26 Iceland Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 52 and 105.27 Ibid, 119.28 Ibid.29 Wang and Lo, ‘Just Transition: a Conceptual Review’; Heffron and McCauley, ‘What is the “Just Transition”?’.30 Wang and Lo, ibid.31 García-García, Carpintero and Buendía, ‘Just Energy Transitions’; Stevis and Felli, ‘Global Labour Unions’.32 Wang and Lo, ‘Just Transition: a Conceptual Review’.33 Stevis and Felli, ‘Global Labour Unions’.34 See e.g. Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition.35 See e.g. Rowell, ‘Sámi Wind Turbine Protest’; Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’.36 Buhmann, et al., ‘Towards Socially Sustainable Renewable Energy Projects’.37 Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition.38 Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’; Wang and Lo, ‘Just Transition: a Conceptual Review’.39 See e.g. Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’; Statsnett SF v Sør-Fosen Sijte and others (Fosen judgment).40 United Nations Human Rights Council, Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.41 United Nations General Assembly, Transforming Our World, art. 67.42 Buhmann, ‘Human Rights and Meaningful Stakeholder Engagement’; Mestad, ‘The Voice of Affected Persons in the OECD Guidelines and Guidance Documents’.43 e.g., Fosen judgment; Kochale and others v Lake Turkana Wind Power Ltd and others.44 e.g., Cambou, ‘Uncovering Injustices in the Green Transition’; Buhmann et al., ‘Towards Socially Sustainable Renewable Energy Projects’.45 Nenasheva, et al., ‘Legal Tools of Public Participation’.46 Skorstand, Dale and Bay-Larsen, ‘Governing Complexity’, 28.47 Merrild Hansen and Johnstone, ‘In the Shadow of the Mountain’.48 Skrydstrup and Buhmann, ‘Vært for UNESCO Verdensarv’.49 Bjørst, Sejersen and Thisted, ‘Affective Approaches: Rethinking Emotions in Resource Extraction’, 153.50 Ibid, 146.51 Ólafsson, et al., Áfangaskýrsla I, 25–26.52 Ibid, 20.53 Law on Electricity, 1981; see also, Ólafsson, Áfangaskýrsla I, 20.54 Ólafsson, Áfangaskýrsla I, 22.55 Ibid, 23.56 Ibid, 24; see also, Government of Iceland, Yfirlýsing um Noralverkefnið.57 Ólafsson, Áfangaskýrsla I, 25.58 Ibid, 29–30.59 Ibid, 30.60 Law on Authorisation of Contracts for an Aluminium Smelter in Reyðarfjörður, 2003.61 See, Alcoa, ‘Iceland: Yfirlit’.62 EIA is usually traced back to the US National Environmental Policy Act Citation1969.63 Convention on the Protection of the Environment with Protocol Citation1974; Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context 1991.64 EC Council Directive 85/337/EEC.65 Law on Environmental Impact Assessment, 1993.66 EC Directive 2003/35/EC.67 Law on Environmental Impact Assessment, 1993, article 5(1).68 See, Alþingi, Proposal for Parliamentary Resolution.69 See Alþingi Citation1999.70 Landsvirkjun, Kárahnjúkarvirkjun: framkvænd skilyrða fyrir virkjunarleyfi, 4.71 Information provided by lawyer, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.72 National Planning Agency of Iceland, Kárahnjúkavirkjun allt að 750 MW, 278.73 See, Iceland Ministry of the Environment, Decision overturning the Decision of the National Planning Agency.74 Ibid, 4 and 6.75 Ibid, 6.76 Ibid, 122–124.77 Alþingi, Proposal for Law on the Power Station.78 Law on the Power Station at Jökulsár á Brú and Jökulsár í Fljótsdal and the Enlargement of the Krafla Power Station, 2002.79 Information provided by community representative, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.80 Jóhannesson, Heiðarson and Sigurbjarnarson, Social Impacts of an Aluminium Plant in East Iceland 2002-2008, 11.81 Ólafsson, Rannsókn á samfélagsáhrifum álversog virkjunaramkvæmda á Austurlandi.82 Ibid, 37, image 3.15.83 Ibid, 40–41, images 3.20 and 3.21.84 Ibid, 41–42.85 Information provided by community representative, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.86 Information provided by employee of the National Power Company of Iceland, December 2, 2021.87 Information provided by community representative, East Iceland, December 3, 2021.88 See, e.g. McAfefe, et al., ‘Environmental Solutions Fast-Tracked’; Wright and Tolson, The Value of Early Engagement in Planning.89 Fjarðarbyggð, ‘Fjarðarbyggð í tölum’.90 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 28, table 4.91 Statistics Iceland, ‘Mannfjöldi eftir landshlutum, kyni og aldri 1. janúar 1998-2023’.92 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 29, image 10.93 Alcoa, ‘Jafnréttisstefna Alcoa Fjarðaáls’; see also, Alcoa, Citation2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 29, image 9 (for numbers).94 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 29, image 10.95 Ibid. In 2021, there were 64 women under 30 and 41 men under 30. However, only one year before, the pattern was reversed with 64 female employees under 30 and 89 male employees under 30.96 Alcoa, ‘Jafnréttisstefna Alcoa Fjarðaáls’, 2.97 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 33, table 7; Alcoa, ‘Forstjóri og framkvæmdastjórn Alcoa Fjarðaáls’, (only one of the ten senior management positions is held by a woman).98 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 28.99 Information provided by employee of the East Iceland Nature Research Centre, December 2, 2021.100 Seljan, ‘Alcoa lét undan þrýstingi og borgar jafnvel tekjuskatt strax í ár’.101 Norðurál, ‘Raforkukaup Norðuráls’.102 Alcoa, 2021 Samfélagsskýrsla, 41.103 Statistics Iceland, ‘Hlutur atvinnugreina í landsframleiðslu 1997–2022’; ‘Fjöldi herbergja og rúma á hótelum eftir landsvæðum 2015–2023’; and ‘Gistinætur og gestakomur á öllum tegundum gististaða eftir sveitarfélögum 2008–2021’.104 Merrild Hansen and Johnstone, ‘In the Shadow of the Mountain’, 486.105 Information provided by employee of the Austurbrú, December 2, 2021. Austurbrú is a non-governmental organisation consisting of 30 member organisations. These include local authorities, universities, junior colleges, professional bodies and trade unions.106 Information provided by employee of the National Power Company of Iceland, October 13, 2021; and employee of the National power Company, December 2, 2021.107 Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-Making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters, 1998.108 Landsvirkjun, ‘Sjálfbærni’.109 Information provided by employee of the National Power Company of Iceland, October 13, 2021; see also, Landsvirkun, ‘Skipurit’.110 Information provided by employee of East Iceland Nature Research Centre, December 2, 2021.111 Johnson, Kitchens and Gray, ‘Opinion: Facebook Serves as an Echo Chamber, especially for Conservatives’.112 Information provided by employee of East Iceland Nature Research Centre, December 2, Citation2021.113 Heffron, Achieving a Just Transition; and discussion in section 3 above, accompanying note 37.114 Compare Owen, et al., ‘Fast Track to Failure?’.115 See, e.g. Norton, ‘Achieving Excellence in Public Participation and Consultation’ (on different strategies for effective public engagement).116 Bjørst, Sejersen and Thisted, ‘Affective Approaches: Rethinking Emotions in Resource Extraction’, 153; see also section 3, above.117 See Steenstrup, et al., Visjonsrapport (for an example of town strategic planning based on extensive public engagement in anticipation of a megaproject).118 See, e.g. Austurbrú, ‘Brothættar byggðir’.119 See, e.g. Penny Norton, ‘Achieving Excellence in Public Participation and Consultation’; Skjervedal, ‘Youth as a Resource in Extractive Industry Decision-Making Processes’; Merrild Hansen and Johnstone, ‘Arctic Voices: Strategies for Community Engagement’.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Grant from the Nordic Council of Ministers' Arctic Co-operation Programme [Project No A21751].
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冰上大型项目:来自Kárahnjúkar水电项目的经验教训,以实现公正的过渡
经过多年的争论和不和,冰岛东部的Kárahnjúkar大坝、发电站和铝冶炼厂于2007年启用。它是冰岛有史以来最大的工业项目,对国家和地方都有影响,既回应又改变了公众对参与、环境影响评估和社区参与的期望。当冰岛寻求利用日益增加的可再生能源供应时,人们提出了一个问题,即在冰岛的背景下,什么是公正的过渡。文章首先讨论了冰岛目前和未来的能源供应和需求。然后深入研究了公正过渡的理论解释。它探讨了Kárahnjúkar项目的决策过程和对该地区的长期影响,然后在公正过渡理论的框架内进行评估。接下来的讨论提供了对公正过渡的关键方面的见解,这些见解可以应用于冰岛和更远的地方的新项目。这些特别涉及就业和社区利益、环境影响评估和公众参与。关键词:公正过渡;北极冰岛;大型项目;公众参与;环境影响评估(EIA)披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1 *本文的实地研究由北欧部长理事会北极合作项目资助,该项目旨在实现北极的社会公正转型:探索、理论化和传播有意义的社区利益相关者参与的最佳实践(项目编号A21751;首席研究员Karin Buhmann)。作者感谢接受采访的个人花时间和分享的信息,感谢阿库雷里大学的ragnheiur Elfa Þorsteinsdóttir在论文发展过程中提供的重要背景研究和反馈,感谢南丹麦大学的ragnheiur和Sanne Vammen Larsen在实地工作中的参与和见解。我们也感谢两位匿名审稿人和本期特刊的客座编辑,他们提出了深刻的意见和建议,使我们能够澄清我们的一些论点。所有错误由署名作者负责”贝克特尔。' Fjardaál冰岛铝厂';美国铝业,Citation2021 Samfélagsskýrsla 28-29.3参见,例如Heffron,实现公正的过渡;伍德-唐纳利和奥尔森编。北极正义;Cambou,“揭露绿色转型中的不公正”《实现公正过渡》5同上6《经济、社会和文化权利国际公约》引文1966.7 ragnheei æ ur Elfa Þorsteinsdóttir,阿库雷里大学,Sanne Vammen Larsen,南丹麦大学。这两个人也是更广泛的研究小组的一部分,该小组探索Kárahnjúkar案件以及致谢中提到的研究补助金下的一些其他问题。8受访者被告知,他们不会被点名,但鉴于冰岛社会规模小,其他熟悉此案的人可能会确定任何陈述的来源。在直接引用采访来源的情况下,参与者有机会审查和纠正文本冰岛统计局,“人口”11 .见Martinez Cobo (Citation1987),《歧视问题的研究》,第379段(最常提到的土著人民的定义)冰岛财政和经济事务部,Störf án sta.settingar .12冰岛国家规划局,Kárahnjúkavirkjun allt að 750 MW fyrri áfangi allta að 625 MW og síðari áfangi allt að 125 MW (Kárahnjúkar EIA), 36.13同上,37;又见冰岛统计局,' Hlutur atvinnugreina í landsframlei & slu 1997-2022 'Kárahnjúkar EIA, 37.15 Orkustofnun,冰岛能源统计,4.16 Benediktsson,“能源转型中的冲突想象?”;18 . Stober and Bucher,地热能,15-24.17冰岛可再生能源集群,“水电”和“地热”绿色的冰岛,“水电”《电学法》,1946年,参见Gunnlaugsson, Ólafsdóttir和Óttarson . Proppe, Vindorka: Valkostir og greing .21Orkustofnun,冰岛能源统计,6;冰岛环境、能源和气候变化部,stazha og áskoranir í orkumálum, 105、116和118.22 Landsvirkjun (Citation2022), Gunnur ænna samf30.3, 4.23冰岛环境、能源和气候变化部stazha og áskoranir í orkumálum, 27-28;“Orkuskiptalikan”。冰岛环境、能源和气候变化部Staða og áskoranir í orkumálum, 27-28.25 Landsvirkjun, ' raunsaemnd af orkuþörf ' .26冰岛环境、能源和气候变化部,能源科学与工程学报áskoranir í orkumálum, 52和105.27同上,119.28同上。29王、罗,“公正转型:概念回顾”;Heffron和McCauley,“什么是“公正的过渡”?”,第30页王和罗,同上。
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