Abstract
Emerging and future sustainable energy systems will greatly impact upon landscapes and are likely to require wholesale societal transformation. In Wales, recent policy proposals to achieve decarbonisation prescribe greater roles for local and community energy. However, wider citizen engagement and public discourse on comprehensive energy transformations appear somewhat stagnant. The ‘Stories of Change’ project has sought to catalyse more plural public debates around energy futures. As part of the project, we explored past and present everyday energy relationships with communities in the Valleys of south Wales. At a time of energy transition, and legislative and policy flux, the Valleys afford opportunities to reveal stories about past and present energy experiences and relationships in order to gain enhanced understanding into emerging social meanings of new energy infrastructures and evolving energy landscapes. Here we focus on relationships with ‘old’ energy landscapes; how these and the prevailing socio-economic landscape influence the perceptions and creation of emerging ones; and, how communities are engaged and involved in the making of new energy landscapes. We consider finally how these might inform implementation of proposed energy policy, especially in a Welsh context.
Highlights
Wales was arguably the ‘world's first carbon-based economy’ with energy-based societal transitions resulting from its early development of iron and coal industries (Wang and Eames, 2010)
The Environment and Sustainability Committee of the National Assembly of Wales2 has proposed that Wales should establish a clear vision for its energy future, arguing that use of its existing powers and levers can help achieve that (National Assembly for Wales, 2016)
Amongst its recommendations is greater support for local and community energy. It proposes that reduced carbon emissions and energy demand should be delivered through the Well-being of Future Generations Act (WFGA) (Welsh Government, 2016a)
Summary
Wales was arguably the ‘world's first carbon-based economy’ with energy-based societal transitions resulting from its early development of iron and coal industries (Wang and Eames, 2010). Amongst its recommendations is greater support for local and community energy It proposes that reduced carbon emissions and energy demand should be delivered through the Well-being of Future Generations Act (WFGA) (Welsh Government, 2016a). This Act came into force in April 2016 and is viewed as ‘one of the most holistic pieces of sustainable legislation to be passed worldwide’ (FuturePolicy.org, 2016). At a time of energy transition, and policy flux in Wales, the Valleys afford a great opportunity to reveal stories about past and present energy experiences and relationships in communities with the aim of gaining enhanced understanding into emerging social meanings of new energy infrastructures and evolving energy landscapes. We consider how these might inform implementation of proposed energy policy, especially in a Welsh context
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