Green Hydrogen Production in Tunisia

Detail of the cover of PRIF Report 2/2025: View of a solar farm in the desert, distorted by a red color gradient.

Image: Young777 © istockphoto

New PRIF Report looks at lines of conflict and prevention options

With the Green Deal and the energy crisis caused by Russia’s war in Ukraine, the EU has accelerated the transition towards importing renewable energy (RE), including green hydrogen, from North Africa. EU deci­sion-makers portray the energy transition as a win-win situation, while civil society actors and scholars criticize these developments as “green extracti­vism” and “green colonialism”. In these debates, little attention is directed toward activism in the national realm and (potentially) affected communities. Understanding the views and actions on the ground can help us develop a broader assess­ment of the conflict potential of export-oriented green energy production.

Using Tunisia as an example, Irene Weipert-Fenner shows that green hydrogen exports are closely linked to ongoing domestic political struggles over the political economy and must be seen in the context of a post-colonial energy history. She identifies the three main lines of conflict and discusses opportunities and limitations for conflict prevention that EU countries have a responsi­bility to address in their energy policies. Germany, European countries and the EU carry a particular responsibility here as major drivers of the GH2 economy and should integrate ongoing and potential RE-related conflicts into their policies, be it in the form of development cooperation or intergovern­mental agreements.

Dr. Irene Weipert-Fenner is a Senior Researcher, Project Director of the Research Depart­ment Intra­state Conflict, and Coordi­nator of the Research Group Regime Compe­tition at PRIF. Her research focuses on authori­tarian regimes and political trans­formation as well as social move­ments and social justice conflicts, with a regional focus on North Africa.

The report is available for download (PDF).