The Responsible Edge Podcast
The energy transition has a materials problem most corporate sustainability reports do not address. Wind turbines, electric vehicles, and grid-scale batteries require cobalt, lithium, and nickel extracted from mines. The governance architecture sitting between those mines and the finished product is, in most supply chains, structurally incomplete. In this episode of The Responsible Edge, host Charlie Martin speaks with J.J. Messner, Sector Lead for Downstream Purchasers at the Initiative for Responsible Mining Assurance, about a 2025 analysis of how CDOP and the Science Based Targets initiative are attempting to give carbon accountability sharper teeth. JJ brings two decades of field experience across more than a hundred countries, from directing the Fragile States Index at the Fund for Peace to leading responsible sourcing at Microsoft. His argument is precise: the frameworks governing responsible mining are well-designed, but they struggle to reach the people making day-to-day sourcing decisions, because those people are appraised on cost, quality, and timeliness, and nothing else. "You're looking at people who have the responsibility without the accountability and people who have the accountability without the responsibility." The conversation covers why excluding risky suppliers moves the problem without solving it, why supplier capacity investment is the structural alternative, and why the green energy transition cannot be separated from the question of who bears the cost of the mining it requires. If your work touches supply chains, responsible sourcing, or the material reality of net zero, this episode is worth your time. #ResponsibleSourcing #CriticalMinerals #SupplyChainAccountability #ResponsibleMining #GreenTransition #TheResponsibleEdge
162 episodios
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