Glad you found the bibliography intriguing! I got my degree specialising in environmental history and then trained and (briefly!) worked as a history teacher, so I can't resist the urge to share texts with people. If you are interested in the politics of climate justice, I can also send you an epub version of Dunlap's book so you can read the chapter which our game is based on!
Unfortunately I don't have a digital copy of Dismantling Green Colonialism, which is a drier but more stark look at how large infrastructure projects (including renewable energy projects) are foisted on impoverished communities as a tool of domination and control (e.g. the EU using them as a tool of it's neo-colonial economic domination of Africa and the Middle East, while Morocco uses wind farms specifically to deny statehood to the Western Saharan peoples which it occupies), and that those with the biggest stakes in renewable projects are typically petro-chemical companies diversifying their portfolios to fund further unsustainable extraction.
I'll avoid lecturing any further, but thanks again for your interest in our game and our themes!