In 2013, Mexico undertook a series of national energy reforms that promoted largescale, privately-funded renewable energy development. The stated goals of the reforms were to fill investment gaps in the public energy sector and to help meet CO2 reduction targets. Human rights and environmental organizations in Mexico, however, have criticize this model of development promoted by the reforms for their apparent contributions to increasing human rights abuses and generating new “socio-economic conflicts.”¹ Using data collected between 2010-2020 at the Business and Human Rights Resources Centre on abuses in renewable energy development across Latin America and a review of policy, regulatory and legal regimes of the reforms, this thesis explo...
The expansion of renewable energy sources to enable a reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions has inte...
In the framework of the approved Energy Reform in 2013, Mexico puts an end to seven decades of cent...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2005.In...
Mexico’s recent energy reform portends a new era of private engagement in the oil and gas sectors. A...
Adopting ambitious renewable energy targets has profound social, economic, and environmental implica...
In 2013, Mexico started the liberalisation of its electricity sector through a major reform that end...
The authors address different aspects of the energy transition in Mexico from an interdisciplinary p...
Mexico’s recent energy reform has received much praise for the economic benefits it promises to brin...
Human activities that impact the Earth’s climate are driven, in large part, by energy consumption. A...
The opening of Mexico’s energy sector to private investment, along with more critical public attitud...
Mexico has taken a major step to further liberalize its economy. In a historical move, the country o...
Constitutional reform of Mexico’s energy sector is targeted, in part, at facilitating access via unc...
For decades, Mexico’s needs for electricity and petroleum products have been managed by the state in...
Renewable energy as radical innovation requires not just technology substitution, but also fundament...
Although there are enormous potential benefits for Mexico's energy sector in the future, there are a...
The expansion of renewable energy sources to enable a reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions has inte...
In the framework of the approved Energy Reform in 2013, Mexico puts an end to seven decades of cent...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2005.In...
Mexico’s recent energy reform portends a new era of private engagement in the oil and gas sectors. A...
Adopting ambitious renewable energy targets has profound social, economic, and environmental implica...
In 2013, Mexico started the liberalisation of its electricity sector through a major reform that end...
The authors address different aspects of the energy transition in Mexico from an interdisciplinary p...
Mexico’s recent energy reform has received much praise for the economic benefits it promises to brin...
Human activities that impact the Earth’s climate are driven, in large part, by energy consumption. A...
The opening of Mexico’s energy sector to private investment, along with more critical public attitud...
Mexico has taken a major step to further liberalize its economy. In a historical move, the country o...
Constitutional reform of Mexico’s energy sector is targeted, in part, at facilitating access via unc...
For decades, Mexico’s needs for electricity and petroleum products have been managed by the state in...
Renewable energy as radical innovation requires not just technology substitution, but also fundament...
Although there are enormous potential benefits for Mexico's energy sector in the future, there are a...
The expansion of renewable energy sources to enable a reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions has inte...
In the framework of the approved Energy Reform in 2013, Mexico puts an end to seven decades of cent...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2005.In...