Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagement

Australian local governments develop and deliver a range of community engagement programmes designed to reduce household-based greenhouse gas emissions. This article draws on practice theory to analyse how these programmes have changed over time in response to the rapid deployment of a domestic rene...

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Main Authors: David Meiklejohn, Sarah Bekessy, Susie Moloney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Cogent Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2018.1481584
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spelling doaj-a01aa2e585e64ca69964ea9d4b0f120b2021-03-02T14:23:43ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Environmental Science2331-18432018-01-014110.1080/23311843.2018.14815841481584Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagementDavid Meiklejohn0Sarah Bekessy1Susie Moloney2RMIT UniversityRMIT UniversityRMIT UniversityAustralian local governments develop and deliver a range of community engagement programmes designed to reduce household-based greenhouse gas emissions. This article draws on practice theory to analyse how these programmes have changed over time in response to the rapid deployment of a domestic renewable energy technology: rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV). After outlining the practice “lens” used to analyse these practices, we draw on empirical research to examine traditional forms of climate change community engagement practice including meanings of leadership adopted by local governments. We note how these play out in the form of ambitious community-based greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets that favour technological responses to climate change which in turn has favoured the rise of rooftop solar PV, and how community engagement practices have changed as a result. We find that Australian local government climate change community engagement practices have experienced three distinct forms of performance. The first, what might be termed “traditional” climate change community engagement practices, rely upon individuals acting out of adherence to pro-social environmental values. The second highlights the technology of rooftop solar PV with its associated pro-individual motivations, such as financial benefit. The third form, which is currently emerging, positions local governments as “disruptors” of centralised energy systems mobilising rooftop solar PV amongst actors currently excluded from the solar revolution, such as renters, low income households and community energy groups. In extending the meanings of rooftop solar PV uptake beyond financial benefits to a shared response to climate change, local governments become active agents in mobilising community energy transitions.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2018.1481584local governmentcommunity engagementsocial practice theoryrooftop solar photovoltaicenergy transition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Meiklejohn
Sarah Bekessy
Susie Moloney
spellingShingle David Meiklejohn
Sarah Bekessy
Susie Moloney
Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagement
Cogent Environmental Science
local government
community engagement
social practice theory
rooftop solar photovoltaic
energy transition
author_facet David Meiklejohn
Sarah Bekessy
Susie Moloney
author_sort David Meiklejohn
title Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagement
title_short Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagement
title_full Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagement
title_fullStr Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagement
title_full_unstemmed Shifting practices: How the rise of rooftop solar PV has changed local government community engagement
title_sort shifting practices: how the rise of rooftop solar pv has changed local government community engagement
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Environmental Science
issn 2331-1843
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Australian local governments develop and deliver a range of community engagement programmes designed to reduce household-based greenhouse gas emissions. This article draws on practice theory to analyse how these programmes have changed over time in response to the rapid deployment of a domestic renewable energy technology: rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV). After outlining the practice “lens” used to analyse these practices, we draw on empirical research to examine traditional forms of climate change community engagement practice including meanings of leadership adopted by local governments. We note how these play out in the form of ambitious community-based greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets that favour technological responses to climate change which in turn has favoured the rise of rooftop solar PV, and how community engagement practices have changed as a result. We find that Australian local government climate change community engagement practices have experienced three distinct forms of performance. The first, what might be termed “traditional” climate change community engagement practices, rely upon individuals acting out of adherence to pro-social environmental values. The second highlights the technology of rooftop solar PV with its associated pro-individual motivations, such as financial benefit. The third form, which is currently emerging, positions local governments as “disruptors” of centralised energy systems mobilising rooftop solar PV amongst actors currently excluded from the solar revolution, such as renters, low income households and community energy groups. In extending the meanings of rooftop solar PV uptake beyond financial benefits to a shared response to climate change, local governments become active agents in mobilising community energy transitions.
topic local government
community engagement
social practice theory
rooftop solar photovoltaic
energy transition
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2018.1481584
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