Barriers to Inclusivity in the Solar Value Chain – Online Seminar

This online seminar will host colleagues from the Transforming Energy Access TEA)@SUNRISE Network, who will share insights from their forthcoming report - Barriers to Inclusivity in the Solar Value Chain: Africa, Asia, and the Indo-Pacific Region.

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TEA@SUNRISE is part of the Transforming Energy Access (TEA) platform, funded by UK aid from the UK Government, and aims to accelerate the adoption of next-generation solar technologies through research, innovation, and partnerships.

In the report  Dr Carol Maddock and Dr Aelwyn Williams examine the structural and systemic barriers that shape who is included and excluded across the solar photovoltaic (PV) value chain. It highlights how colonial legacies, gendered and patriarchal norms, and uneven capital flows continue to influence renewable energy sectors across different regions.

Through a Gender Equality, Disability, and Social Inclusion (GEDSI) lens, the authors emphasise the urgent need for more intentional and justice-driven approaches to energy transitions. Without such attention, efforts to accelerate solar solutions in response to climate change pressures risk reproducing historical inequalities, deepening marginalisation, and reinforcing patterns reminiscent of earlier models of unequal development.

Event Details

  • Date: Tuesday, 10 March 2026
  • Time: 1-3pm (GMT)

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This seminar is organised as part of the JustGESI XChange Series, a platform dedicated to fostering knowledge sharing, collective learning, and critical dialogue on justice-oriented approaches to global energy transitions.

Participants are warmly encouraged to bring questions, reflections, and examples from their own contexts for an open discussion.

About the Speakers

Dr Carol Maddock and Dr Aelwyn Williams are Senior Researchers within the TEA@SUNRISE team, supporting all TEA@SUNRISE activities. Their roles focus on embedding inclusion across the project by leading research and capacity‑building initiatives that enable partners and network members to design and deliver more equitable energy solutions. They also work with other TEA infrastructure team to develop practical GEDSI tools and guidance.

About JustGESI

JustGESI (Mainstreaming Gender Equality and Social Inclusion for a Just Energy Transition in Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, and Tanzania) is a three-year interdisciplinary research initiative funded by the UKRI Ayrton Challenge Programme and led by Professor Vanesa Castán Broto at the Urban Institute, University of Sheffield. The project brings together partner organisations across Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, South Africa and the UK, integrating engineering with critical social science to promote equitable clean energy transitions and address the systemic exclusion of women and marginalised groups from the energy sector.

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