This special issue of Renewable public acceptance of green hydrogen in Germany; the legal-ecological redesign of ground-mounted solar along transport corridors; intermediary roles and implementation dynamics in Germany’s electric-vehicle policy mix; determinants of energy poverty across the European Union; the geoeconomics of hydrogen standards, certification, and trade; practice-based lessons for meaningful participation in energy projects; and survey evidence on how citizens in Germany and Switzerland weigh energy security against climate mitigation. Together, these contributions connect EU-level market design and shifts in external dependencies with regional siting, municipal planning, and household-level perceptions, using mixed methods that include high-resolution spatial analysis, comparative policy analysis, and large-N surveys. Collectively, the contributions provide a comparative evidence base and conceptual scaffolding for social science energy research, clarifying how governance architectures, justice claims, and security imperatives shape deployment, consent, and system performance. They supply transferable methods, identify testable propositions, and surface datasets for longitudinal analysis, establishing a reference point for subsequent inquiry into the dynamics of rapid, socially robust energy transitions in Europe.
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Jörg Radtke
W. Canzler
Japan External Trade Organization
Research Institute for Sustainability at GFZ
Institute for Sustainability
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Radtke et al. (Wed,) studied this question.