PODCAST · society
Energ’Ethic - Climate Justice and Energy Transition
by Marine Cornelis
Energy transitions are failing not because of technology, but because of governance. Who bears the cost of getting it wrong. Who is excluded from the benefits. Who holds the institutions accountable.Energ'Ethic is a podcast about those questions. Hosted by Marine Cornelis — founder of Next Energy Consumer and a leading voice on energy poverty, consumer rights, and the social conditions of the energy transition — each episode brings together the people who are closest to where policy meets reality: regulators navigating enforcement gaps, researchers with evidence that hasn't reached the policy room yet, practitioners managing the friction between EU ambition and local capacity.The conversations are rigorous and grounded. The guests are people with direct institutional knowledge and genuine stakes in getting this right.Energ'Ethic is listened to by policymakers, legal and regulatory professionals, NGO and civil society leaders, and researchers working at the intersection of energy, ho
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[Replay] When Information Is the Infrastructure: Rethinking Energy Poverty from the Ground Up - Marta Garcia Paris
Energy poverty didn't exist as a concept in Spain when Marta García París first encountered it. Today, Ecoserveis runs one of the most cited local intervention models in Europe — built not on technical expertise alone, but on the conviction that citizens are the experts, and institutions exist to translate that expertise into action.This episode, originally released in 2021, marks the beginning of Energ'Ethic. We're replaying it at episode 100 because the questions it raises have only sharpened: who gets to access the energy transition, on what terms, and through whose knowledge?What this episode covers:How Ecoserveis came to define energy poverty in a Mediterranean context where the concept had no name — and what that process reveals about the limits of Northern European policy frameworks when applied elsewhereThe Barcelona energy advice points: a public service model that pairs technical energy guidance with peer support from people who have themselves experienced vulnerabilityWhy information access — not technology — remains the central barrier to an inclusive energy transition, and how targeted advice can unblock situations that financial support alone cannotThe compounding effect of COVID-19 on energy vulnerability, particularly for households that shifted from workplace to home without the financial or physical infrastructure to absorb that changeHow European project networks enabled Ecoserveis to import, test, and ultimately export intervention models — including a peer-to-peer training approach now being scaled through the SWEET projectMarine Cornelis is the founder of Next Energy Consumer, a policy consultancy working on energy poverty, consumer rights, and housing at EU level. If you are working on a related mandate or research question, you can reach her at [email protected]' Ethic goes out every other week.Keep up to date with new episodes straight from your inboxReach out to Marine Cornelis via BlueSky or LinkedInMusic: I Need You Here - KamariusEdition: Podcast Media Factory Support Energ'Ethic on Patreon© Next Energy Consumer, 2026Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Energy transitions are failing not because of technology, but because of governance. Who bears the cost of getting it wrong. Who is excluded from the benefits. Who holds the institutions accountable.Energ'Ethic is a podcast about those questions. Hosted by Marine Cornelis — founder of Next Energy Consumer and a leading voice on energy poverty, consumer rights, and the social conditions of the energy transition — each episode brings together the people who are closest to where policy meets reality: regulators navigating enforcement gaps, researchers with evidence that hasn't reached the policy room yet, practitioners managing the friction between EU ambition and local capacity.The conversations are rigorous and grounded. The guests are people with direct institutional knowledge and genuine stakes in getting this right.Energ'Ethic is listened to by policymakers, legal and regulatory professionals, NGO and civil society leaders, and researchers working at the intersection of energy, ho
HOSTED BY
Marine Cornelis
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