Green transition, extractivism and sustainability: a growth problem
This article contends that the “green transition” has been based on a narrow interpretation of sustainability, primarily centred on decarbonization, while the material, ecological, and human rights costs linked to extractivism remain insufficiently incorporated into governance frameworks. It highlights the growth imperative as a structural driver of increasing raw-material consumption and extractive pressures, and it questions the idea that the energy transition alone equates to planetary sustainability. The analysis examines the governance of critical raw materials and several EU regulatory instruments, demonstrating how sustainability and due diligence requirements are fragmented across sectoral regimes and selective material scopes, leading to uneven coverage and a de facto hierarchy in which climate and strategic autonomy objectives may take precedence over biodiversity protection. The article concludes that a truly sustainable transition necessitates redefining sustainability beyond carbon metrics, integrating ecological limits, social justice and global equity into mineral governance, and supplementing technological substitution, circularity and efficiency with explicit political strategies aimed at reducing material demand – particularly in high-consumption economies.
SDG

Mariona Cardona VallèsLecturer in International Law at the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC), where she also serves as director of the Master Degree in Diplomacy and International Affairs (UOC-UNITAR). She has been accredited as a lecturer at AQU Catalunya and has obtained her PhD in Law (cum laude, international distinction) from Pompeu Fabra University, with support from a competitive doctoral PIPF grant. She conducted a research stay at the Manchester International Law Centre (University of Manchester) and currently serves as an external consultant to the Department of International Law of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, European Union and Cooperation of Spain. Her research focuses on the intersection of international regimes, especially international human rights law, international environmental law and international economic law. Her work critically examines how sustainability and human rights considerations are incorporated into trade and investment regimes, and how legal interpretation contributes to the evolution of international law towards greater environmental and social accountability.

