Community Innovation for Sustainable Energy

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Description

"This 3-year research project studies the diffusion of community energy projects in the UK, and involves researchers in the Sussex Energy Group (SPRU, University of Sussex) and 3S (University of East Anglia).

Recent years have seen a surge in interest and activity in small-scale, sustainable energy projects led by local communities. Examples include solar water heating clubs and insulation clubs, which provide mutual support for system installation; energy awareness and behaviour networks, which provide guidance and reassurance to neighbours on energy matters relevant to them; and co-operatively-owned small-scale renewable energy systems, such as micro-hydro and wind energy.

The project explores the extent of networking between projects, and whether this is assisting in the innovation of community energy. We also assess the performance of projects and provide independent advice to policy-makers and energy businesses about the merits and processes for supporting community energy. We draw upon the findings of our research to develop with practitioners a number of Foresight scenarios for community energy in the UK.

CISE runs from October 2010 to September 2013, and is funded by the UK Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC) and the European Centre Laboratories for Energy Efficiency Research (ECLEER) of EdF Energy." (http://grassrootsinnovations.org/2012/03/25/community-innovation-for-sustainable-energy-cise/)


Research Paper

* Article: Sabine Hielscher, Gill Seyfang and Adrian Smith (2011) Community Innovation for Sustainable Energy CSERGE Working Paper 2011-03, (CSERGE, Norwich)

URL = http://www.cserge.ac.uk/publications/cserge-working-paper/2011-03-community-innovation-sustainable-energy

As in other countries, there is a growing public, policy and business interest in the UK in the roles and potential of community-led initiatives for sustainable energy consumption and production. Such initiatives include green lifestyle-based activities to reduce energy consumption (e.g. Transition Towns, and Carbon Reduction Action Groups), more traditional behaviour change initiatives such as neighbourhood insulation projects and energy-saving campaigns, as well as renewable energy generation projects such as community-owned windfarms and biofuel projects.

Case studies of specific projects identify a variety of rationales amongst participants, whilst policy interest suggests a more instrumental concern for facilitating additional, larger-scale sustainable energy transitions. Amongst participant rationales are ideas that bottom-up, community-based projects deliver energy savings and behaviour changes that top-down policy instruments cannot achieve, due to the greater local knowledge and engagement they embody, the sense of common ownership and empowerment, and the social capital and trust that is generated among local actors.

These resources provide organisational and values-based ‘grassroots innovations’ which experiment with new consumption practices based on alternative ‘new economics’ values. However, previous research shows ‘grassroots innovations’ face a series of critical challenges requiring support to overcome, in order to achieve their potential benefits more widely. This includes developing ‘niche’ networks for mobilising reforms both to highly centralised energy institutions and infrastructures, as well as deeply ingrained social practices of ‘normal’ energy consumption and everyday life.

What makes this experience fascinating for the purposes of the SCORAI workshop is the way these community-based initiatives are trying to develop new energy-related consumption practices with a view to the socio-technical transition to local, renewable or lower carbon energy systems. Understandably, many projects remain practically focused on securing early successes and resourcing their long-term survival. However, the institutional and infrastructure reforms that will help in this endeavour require strategies for addressing the wider (national and international) political economy of consumption which adopts an ecological modernisation approach to sustainability. In surveying the community energy scene in the UK, our paper pays particular attention to this last issue." (http://grassrootsinnovations.org/2012/03/24/working-paper-community-innovation-for-sustainable-energy/)