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Bregje van Veelen, photo.

Bregje van Veelen

Associate senior lecturer

Bregje van Veelen, photo.

Community energy : Entanglements of community, state, and private sector

Author

  • Emily Creamer
  • Will Eadson
  • Bregje van Veelen
  • Annabel Pinker
  • Margaret Tingey
  • Tim Braunholtz-Speight
  • Marianna Markantoni
  • Mike Foden
  • Max Lacey-Barnacle

Summary, in English

The decarbonisation of energy systems is leading to a reconfiguration of the geographies of energy. One example is the emergence of community energy, which has become a popular object of study for geographers. Although widely acknowledged to be a contested, capacious, and flexible term, “community energy” is commonly presented as singular, bounded, and localised. In this paper, we challenge this conception of community energy by considering evidence about the role and influence of three categories of actors: community, state, and private sector. We demonstrate how community energy projects are unavoidably entangled with a diversity of actors and institutions operating at and across multiple scales. We therefore argue that community energy is enabled and constituted by trans-scalar assemblages of overlapping actors, which demands multi-sectoral participation and coordination. We point to the need for further academic attention on the boundaries between these actors to better understand the role of different intermediary practices and relationships in facilitating the development of decentralised energy systems with just outcomes.

Publishing year

2018-07

Language

English

Publication/Series

Geography Compass

Volume

12

Issue

7

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Topic

  • Social and Economic Geography
  • Social Sciences Interdisciplinary
  • Energy Systems

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1749-8198