Economics and Finance of the Green Transition

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A01=Ewelina Sokolowska
A01=Magdalena Olczyk
and Governance disclosure standards
Author_Ewelina Sokolowska
Author_Magdalena Olczyk
Category=GTP
Category=KCB
Category=KCVG
Category=KF
Category=KJMV
Climate policy evaluation
Climate-related financial risk
Energy transition policy
Environmental
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Green bonds and investment funds
Green finance
Just transition
Social
Sustainable development
Sustainable finance taxonomy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041198581
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The green transition is no longer simply a question of better technologies or stronger carbon prices. It is a question of whether decarbonisation can remain feasible, investable, and socially durable under volatility, geopolitical rivalry, ecological limits, and distributional conflict. This book examines the transition as a systemic process shaped by bottlenecks, institutional capacity, and the interaction of policy, finance, and social legitimacy.

Bringing together political economy, governance, and green finance, the book analyses how policy instruments, metrics, resilience, and risk architectures condition the pace and durability of transformation. It explores the design of policy mixes, the role of indicators as governance devices, and the architecture of de-risking, market-making, coordination, disclosure, and supervisory frameworks. The discussion also addresses digital innovation, greenwashing risks, and the ways in which climate and regulatory uncertainty reshape capital allocation. Comparative evidence from the European Union, the United States, and China, together with analysis of European electricity markets, shows how transition strategies succeed or fail as constraints shift.

Written for academics, policymakers, regulators, practitioners, and graduate students in economics, finance, and sustainability, the book offers a framework for understanding how the transition can be governed under turbulence. It provides tools for identifying binding constraints, evaluating resilience, and understanding how credibility, sequencing, and uncertainty affect investment. Rather than offering a blueprint, it shows how transitions depend on managing sequences of constraints over time. Its central message is that a sustainable transition depends not on ambition alone, but on institutions capable of making long-term commitment credible under structural uncertainty.

Ewelina Sokołowska is Professor of Economics and Head of the Department of Digital Economy and Finance, Faculty of Management and Economics, Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland.

Magdalena Olczyk is a Professor in the Department of Digital Economy and Finance, Faculty of Management and Economics, Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland.

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