What quotes do you think are useful for the arguments in our EP article?

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Alison Kenner's picture
June 25, 2020
In response to:

Chapter 3, page 16: "individuals act as 'micro-resource managers.'"

Chapter 3, page 16: "Shove makes a similar point, noting that 'when energy is in the spotlight, the services it provides are in the shadows' (Shove, 1997, p. 271). 

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Briana Leone's picture
June 24, 2020
In response to:

"There are three pillars of sustainability – economic, social and environmental – an idea that has figured strongly in policy discussions since the Bruntdland report of 1987" (Riniken et al., 2019:91).

As earlier quotations mention the nexus between energy, history, cultures, and contexts, we can think about this quote in terms of the ways in which economic, social, and environmental factors shape energy policies, energy demand, and energy consumption. In connection to the DVRPC Climate Adaptation Forum, we can also think of the above in terms of smart grids being able to address the trilemma talked about in the reading, given it tends to address all three pillars of sustainability through 'smart gridding'. Nevertheless, and particularly as related to our EVP project, many policies, state, and utility actions fail to consider meeting affordability, security, or decarbonization as they try to meet the commodification of energy demand.

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Briana Leone's picture
June 24, 2020
In response to:

"Energy consumption is indirectly shaped by policies that are not specifically concerned with energy or carbon emissions as such, but that have profound consequences for both" (Riniken et al., 2019:3).

This really centers some of the discussions we have had in the past couple of months, as particularly related to the COVID-19 pandemic, residential and commercial consumption, and the implications of the former on the latter. More specifically, this quote can help us ideate ways in which we may or may not structure our 'future outlooks' section in our article. We could cite policies now that work to shape energy consumptions in households and in commercial spaces and work to mention or think of ways in which those same non-energy policies could be amended to include energy considerations. 

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Briana Leone's picture
June 24, 2020
In response to:

"Energy is conceptualised as something that is abstracted from what people do, and from the histories, cultures and contexts in which energy demand is constituted' (Riniken et al., 2019, 2).
This quote is important to consider in our article and as we continue the EVP project because it helps situate energy insecurity (vulnerability) within its contexts. Understanding how people cope with energy (expenses and production), what history certain groups or cultures have with energy access, can help formulate a comprehensive classification of energy services and help us identify what kind of policies and interventions are needed in those communities. To keep in mind, however, is these interventions shall not come with a drastic or harmful modification of the communities where actions are operated.

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Briana Leone's picture
June 24, 2020
In response to:

In talks of Energy Demand in the work, important conceptualizations of energy are with regards to its commodity status (Riniken et al., 2019:8). Relevant to our own articles and research, this idea of commodity speaks very directly to our 'energy rights' section. A right cannot certainly be a commodity. In fact, this idea of a commodity is built-up through the paragraph that highlights how energy end-services cannot truly be separated by social practices and should, thus, be considered in their contribution to creating minimal healthy living conditions (Riniken et al., 2019:8).

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Andrew Rosenthal's picture
June 22, 2020
In response to:

 "On a national level, questions of energy or fuel poverty – the inability to afford to keep one’s home adequately heated – tend to focus on the cost of energy" (90)

"Keeping energy systems working and avoiding failure is important, but we need to look at how to achieve this beyond building more supply to meet an unquestioned demand. Starting with asking what in fact energy systems are working for would be a good first step, opening up a question that is systematically ignored by classic ‘keeping the lights on’ thinking."
(72)

"In other words, the shift to service-based business models does not inherently challenge ‘meta-services’ or reduce levels of energy service demand"

"To conclude, policies and strategies that focus on energy as a resource are inherently limited" 23

"Much of this literature supposes that basic needs (for nutrition, shelter, clean water, education, thermal comfort, a non-threatening environment, etc.) are universal. Exactly how these needs are met changes over time, but the contention is that there are certain unwavering requirements and that these account for some, but perhaps not all, energy demands (de Decker, 2018)" (9)

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