Hoicka, Christina E.Berka, AnnaChitsaz, SaraKlym, KaylaRegier, AdamMacdonald, Megan2026-02-172025-08-072026-02-172026Hoicka, C. E., Berka, A., Chitsaz, S., Klym, K., Regier, A., & Macdonald, M. (2026). Impacts and place-based approaches to transformative energy justice for First Nations. Environmental Research: Energy. https://doi.org/10.1088/2753-3751/ae3c15https://doi.org/10.1088/2753-3751/ae3c15https://hdl.handle.net/1828/22564.2Published versionPlace-based approaches to renewable energy transitions tailor solutions to specific social, cultural, economic and ecological contexts inherent to particular localities. Drawing on transformative energy justice frameworks and approaches, we argue that place-based framings and interpretations of impacts of community renewable energy projects provide the means to center Indigenous worldviews, observations and experiences of justice associated with these projects. This co-created study draws on interviews with knowledge holders in 14 First Nations across the Province of British Columbia (BC), Canada. Interview participants shared experiences and observations on both the process (community engagement) and outcome (impacts and benefits) dimensions of 36 operational and planned renewable energy projects, pointing to a rich diversity of social, political, material, economic, ecological and relational impacts. Across a wide range of project sizes and technologies, the findings indicate that deep community engagement and the collective decisions for allocation of revenues mediate the positive and transformative impacts experienced by the community. Taken collectively, these findings show that First Nations approaches to developing projects are place-based, ensuring a wide range of impacts to the community that can collectively contribute to transformative change. In the broader context of systematic neglect of social, environmental and justice-oriented values in public policy making, and amidst widespread failure of ‘decide-announce-defend’ approaches to achieving social acceptance for renewable energy projects, this study demonstrates what distinguishes place-based approaches in practice, and how they deliver transformative outcomes for First Nations. Policy, project and resource allocation decisions should reflect the diverse impacts and transformative outcomes of renewable energy projects in First Nations contexts. We conclude that embedding place-based approaches in institutional arrangements, policy and project design is critical to providing economic opportunities to First Nations without discrimination under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, alongside meeting BC’s power needs and decarbonization goals.enAttribution 4.0 Internationalplace-based approachestransformative energy justicerenewable energyFirst NationsIndigenousRe-Imagining Social Energy Transitions CoLaboratoryImpacts and place-based approaches to transformative energy justice for First NationsArticleDepartment of GeographyDepartment of Civil Engineering