Multinational companies and the green transition

New paper examines how local regulations and multinational strategies affect the potential for local development in the shift to green energy

June 16, 2021

As the global transition away from fossil fuels to renewable energy gathers pace, it is becoming clear that unlocking sustainable economic, industrial, environmental and social development along with the green transition requires more than just financial investments.

The development of large-scale renewable energy projects, such as wind and solar power, increasingly involves large multinational companies operating as project developers, investors and technology suppliers.

However, we generally know little about the specific role that they play in terms of localizing their activities in host country markets and how to harness their enormous potential for job creation, community and skill development and broader socio-economic development.

Skills development of local employees  

In a new paper, published in Energy Research and Social Science, UNEP DTU Partnership researchers address this knowledge gap by conducting an in-depth study of a Scandinavian-owned subsidiary operating in the market for solar power in South Africa. Specifically, the study investigated the learning and technological capability trajectory.

The study found that the subsidiary, which provides project development and engineering, procurement and construction services for solar power projects, was able to achieve an advanced level of innovation capabilities in an unusually short period of time. Since its inception in 2011, the company has not only established itself as a local industry leader, but has been able to expand into other growing renewable energy markets in Africa and beyond.

The study highlights the subsidiary’s dedicated efforts to combine knowledge transfer from the parent company with local sources of knowledge. While the subsidiary was able to make use of existing competences in the local labour market, the locally recruited staff were trained further into highly skilled positions. Hence, the study shows the contribution of the subsidiary to nurture the development of increasingly specialized skills of local employees.

Industry localization regulation

The study points to the importance of the state and national regulation in localizing the activities of multinational companies operating in the global market through the government’s use of local content requirements as part of the renewable energy policy. Such requirements were found to have been instrumental in stimulating the localization of activities and the realization of local employment and skills development.

Focus on strong institutions

The findings in the study align with UNEP DTU Partnership’s macro level research of renewable energy procurement in South Africa, which examines how procurement frameworks can maximise sustainable development of local communities and industries over a period of three years.

Read more about the TENTRANS project here.

Based on this research, long-term continuity and predictability of the regulatory frameworks around renewable energy procurement encourages competition, price reductions, and industrial and socio-economic development.

However, the details of the frameworks are important and need to be tailored to the specific conditions of each country, which means that research, technical support, capacity-building and institutional strengthening become the most important aspects to consider both for developing countries and for donors wishing to support a sustainable green transition with positive impact on SDGs as well as climate change.