“…Second, and empirically, the critical lens of the study aims to force more justice aware research and policymaking related to EVs in the Nordic region (and beyond), so that vulnerabilities and risks can be mitigated, and losers minimized or compensated. The Nordic region has aggressive energy, transport and climate policies backed by welfare states with high taxes (Westholm and Lindahl 2012); high penetration rates for the adoption of renewable electricity and energy efficiency (International Energy Agency and Nordic Energy Research 2013, International Energy Agency andNordic Energy Research 2016;Sovacool 2017); and (most relevant for this study) high rates of adoption for EVs (Berkeley et al 2017). The International Energy Agency (2018) notes that across Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden, the total stock of EVs reached 250,000 cars at the end of 2017 and Energy injustice and electric mobility 5 accounted for 8% of the global total, the third-largest share after China and the United States.…”