Green Energy Transitions in Europe: Impacts on Biodiversity, Landscapes and Justice

Call

2024 – 2025 BiodivTransform

Duration

01/02/2026 – 31/01/2029

Total grant

Approx. 1.4 mil. €

More information

Timothy Moss

Partners of the project

  • Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany
  • Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Erkner, Germany
  • University of Seville, Seville, Spain
  • University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands
  • University of Graz, Graz, Austria
BiodivTransform_JustBioSolar_map

Context

Solar energy is a key pillar of Europe’s climate mitigation strategy, but its rapid expansion is transforming rural landscapes where biodiversity, agriculture, and cultural heritage intersect. Large-scale ground-mounted solar installations require substantial land, which can lead to habitat loss, landscape fragmentation, and social conflict, especially when projects are planned without meaningful involvement of local communities.

Current planning and assessment processes often do not sufficiently take into account biocultural diversity (the interdependence of biodiversity, local knowledge, and cultural values) as well as questions of environmental justice, such as who decides, who benefits, and who bears the costs of solar energy projects. If these dimensions are ignored, the green energy transition risks reproducing extractive and unjust patterns known from fossil fuel systems, undermining both biodiversity protection and public acceptance.
JustBioSolar addresses this challenge by examining ground-mounted solar energy deployment as a biodiversity-climate-society nexus, aiming to support a renewable energy transition that is not only low-carbon, but also nature-positive and socially just.

Main objectives

JustBioSolar aims to:

  • Assess how large-scale solar projects affect biodiversity, including biocultural diversity, and perceptions of justice in different European rural contexts.
  • Identify planning, governance, and communication practices that enable socially just and biodiversity-friendly solar development.
  • Understand how power relations and policy discourses shape solar energy decisions from local to European levels.
  • Co-develop practical principles and pathways for sustainable solar energy landscapes together with stakeholders.

Main activities

The project conducts in-depth case studies in Germany, Spain, Italy, and the Czech Republic, where solar deployment is rapidly expanding, complemented by cases in Sweden and Colombia that illuminate biodiversity and justice impacts associated with raw material extraction for solar technologies. JustBioSolar engages farmers, local residents, conservation groups, energy developers, and policymakers through a participatory approach that integrates scientific evidence with local knowledge and values. Comparative analysis across European cases identifies recurring trade-offs and conflict hotspots, generating practical guidance for policymakers and planners on anticipating risks, improving participation, and better aligning solar development with biodiversity and justice objectives. Engagement with decision-makers aims to improve planning practices, strengthen community involvement, and support policies that balance climate mitigation with biodiversity conservation and social equity.