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Public event

Can ESG make critical minerals sustainable? The case of Kazakhstan’s oligarchy-dominated and Soviet-based industry

Tampere University
LocationKanslerinrinne 1, 33100 Tampere
Pinni B4113
Date29.10.2025 15.00–17.00 (UTC+2)
Registration deadline: 22.10.2025,23.59 (UTC+3)
LanguageEnglish
Entrance feeFree of charge
Can ESG make critical minerals sustainable? The case of Kazakshtan's oligarchy-dominated and Soviet-based industry. Dr. Asel Doolotkeldieva, University of Potsdam, 29 October 2025 at 15-17.
As the European Union intensifies its pursuit of critical raw materials essential for the sustainability transition and digitalization, resource-rich Central Asia has emerged as a key region of interest. Welcome to the open talk followed by a coffee service to learn and discuss whether ESG and other frameworks can make critical materials sustainable, and what are the challenges.

This presentation explores how the EU and affiliated institutions attempt to manage supply chain risks and oligarchic entanglements through frameworks such as ESG and CSR. Using Kazakhstan as a case study, the presentation examines what happens to the idea of responsible business conduct when it is deployed in environments marked by opaque governance and state-business collusion. It also shows that while ESG and CSR are presented as tools of accountability and sustainability, they have been already previously instrumentalized to whitewash extractive practices.

Speaker bio

Dr. Asel Doolotkeldieva (Research Fellow, University of Potsdam) is a political scientist and political sociologist whose work explores contentious politics across fields such as extractive industries, environmentalism, and authoritarianism. Her current research focuses on the political economies of critical raw material extraction and geopolitical encroachments of the West and China in Central Asia. Dr. Doolotkeldieva also has extensive experience in combining academic research with policy engagement, local community engagement, and advocacy.

Organiser

This event is organised by a project "Just Transition Imaginaries: Digitalization and Sustainability in the European-Central Asian Resource Frontier (JUSTRI)" funded by the DigiSus research platform.

Further information

Anni Kangas, Faculty of Management and Business