Energy Justice is a multi-dimensional concept. It incorporates and synthesizes thinking and action on public health, poverty eradication, environmental degradation, sustainable development, and the need for clean and affordable energy technologies. Numerous organizations and individuals have done invaluable work on one or more dimensions of Energy Justice. The following are links to some of these organizations. Each link is listed under its most applicable heading, but, as the concept of Energy Justice is multidisciplinary, many of these links actually address more than one topic.
Energy Justice

Indoor Air Pollution & Public Health
- Kirk Smith’s Highlighted Publications
- Partnership for Clean Indoor Air (PCIA)
- Center for Entrepreneurship in International Health and Development (CEIHD)
- World Health Organization: Indoor Air Pollution
- Mothers Acting Up
Appropriate Sustainable Energy Technologies (ASETs)
- CSU’s Engines & Energy Conversion Laboratory
- Envirofit
- Engineers Without Borders USA
- Engineers Without Borders International
- Practical Action
- Elephant Energy
Sustainable Development
- UNIDO
- Stockholm Environmental Law and Policy Centre
- Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP)
- Consortium for Capacity Building
- Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES)
- Global Energy Network
- National Energy Center for Sustainable Communities (NECSC)
- UNDP: Millenium Development Goals
- Global Network on Energy for Sustainable Development (GNESD)
Clean, Renewable Energy
- CSU’s Clean Energy Supercluster
- Solix Biofuels
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
- UNIDO: Energy and Climate Change Branch
- Renewable Energy & Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP)
- Berkeley Energy & Resources Collaborative (BERC)
- United Nations Foundation: Deploying Clean Energy Technologies
- World Bank: Energy
- The Baker Institute Energy Forum
- World Economic Forum: Energy Poverty Action