Abstract

This paper argues that current efforts to study and advocate for a change in energy technologies to reduce their climate and other environmental impacts often ignore the political, social, and bodily implications of energy technology choices. Framing renewable energy technologies exclusively in terms of their environmental benefits dismisses important questions about how energy infrastructures can be designed to correspond to democratic forms of socio-politics, forms of social organization that involve independence in terms of meeting energy needs, resilience in terms of adapting to change, participatory decision making and control, equitable distribution of knowledge and efficacy, and just distribution of ownership. Recognizing technological choices as political choices brings explicit attention to the kinds of socio-political restructuring that could be precipitated through a renewable energy technology transition. This paper argues that research on energy transitions should consider the political implications of technological choices, not just the environmental consequences. Further, emerging scholarship on energy practices suggests that social habits of energy usage are themselves political, in that they correspond to and reinforce particular arrangements of power. Acknowledging the embedded politics of technology, as the decades’ old concept of soft path technologies encourages, and integrating insights on the politics of technology with insights on technological practices, can improve future research on energy policy and public perceptions of energy systems. This paper extends insights regarding the socio-political implications of energy paths to consider how understandings of energy technologies as constellations of embedded bodily practices can help further develop our understanding of the consequences of energy technologies, consequences that move beyond environmental implications to the very habits and behaviors of patterned energy usage, which are themselves arguably political. This paper calls for future research that involves explicit examination of the relationship between technologies, socio-political distributions of power and access to energy resources, the social organization of energy practices, and options for energy transitions not just in terms of energy source, but also in terms of scale, design, and modes of ownership and control.

Highlights

  • The groundbreaking work of Amory Lovins on soft energy paths [1,2,3] was part of a larger movement interested in connecting and critiquing both the environmental and socio-political consequences of energy technology choices

  • Framing renewable energy technologies exclusively in terms of environmental benefit dismisses important questions about how energy infrastructures can be designed to correspond to the forms of socio-politics desired by human beings, forms of social organization that involve independence in terms of meeting energy needs, resilience in terms of adapting to change, democratic participation, equitable distribution of knowledge and efficacy, and just distribution of ownership and control

  • Policy framing, and advocacy work related to renewable energy technology adoption focuses on the environmental benefits of these technologies

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Summary

Introduction

The groundbreaking work of Amory Lovins on soft energy paths [1,2,3] was part of a larger movement interested in connecting and critiquing both the environmental and socio-political consequences of energy technology choices. Recognizing technological choices as political choices that shape habitual bodily practice may bring more explicit attention to the kinds of infrastructural and economic restructuring that could be precipitated through a renewable energy technology transition. This perspective encourages research that explicitly examines the kinds of social structures that humans desire (rather than interrogating environmental attitudes, values, or concerns, narrowly conceived) and the technologies that could bring about the desired socio-politics and practices. Connecting the classic argument regarding the political implications of energy technologies from Lovins and the appropriate technology movement with more recent scholarship on energy technologies and social practices helps to extend politics into the realm of bodily habits and patterns of technological engagement. Acknowledging that energy technologies have consequences for both socio-politics and practice can shift the study and promotion of a renewable energy transition

The History of Thought on Soft Energy Paths
Energy Technology Transitions and Climate Change
Conclusions
Full Text
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