This project explores community-owned renewable energy projects to understand their social, economic and environmental impacts and dynamics. This includes gaining insight into the drivers, benefits and challenges for communities to participate in renewable energy in regional areas (including end-of-grid and off-grid locations). It will explore how such efforts are realised on the ground (via legal structures, economic arrangements and community engagement practices) and their impacts on host communities.

Research outcomes will be of use to partners including the NSW Office of Environmental and Heritage and Suntech, as well as more generally to policy makers, local councils, renewable energy developers, ENGOs, regional development organisations and community groups.

Program

Program 3: Engaged Communities

Project leader

Professor Bronwen Morgan, UNSW

Project status

Complete

Project period

07/2014 to 07/2016

Peer Reviewed Research Publications

RP3023: Conference paper: Community renewable energy in Australia: exploring its character and emergence in the context of climate change action

Throughout the world, community involvement in renewable energy across many scales and varieties of activity is increasingly common, driven by broader processes of technical, social, political and environmental change. Social movements play a fundamental role in this process of change, acting as dynamic sites of action and innovation in thinking and practice. The past 10 years have seen the emergence of a growing community movement in Australia around renewable energy. This has predominantly been motivated by a desire to take direct and empowering action on climate change at a local level, especially in the context of wavering Australian government policy and support for both carbon reduction and renewable energy over the same period of time.

Community renewable energy (CRE) is a relatively new feature in the bouquet of climate change action and renewable energy deployment in Australia. CRE is a form of renewable energy deployment in which communities, of location and of interest, come together to initiate, develop, own and benefit from the asset (Seyfang et al 2013; Hicks & Ison 2012; Walker & Devine-Wright 2007).

This paper for the EMES 5th Social Enterprise Research Conference is an effort to understand the scope and character of CRE in Australia and theorise why it has emerged at this time. In doing this we draw on two national surveys of the nascent CRE movement, one conducted in 2011 and the other in 2014, and present an analysis of the key characteristics of CRE in Australia and how these have changed over this time period. We apply social movement theory to analyse its emergence at this time and to compare movement drivers in Australia with those in Germany and Denmark, where CRE is most well established.

Community renewable energy in Australia:exploring its character and emergence in the context of climate change action (725483 PDF)


RP3023: Journal article: An exploration of the boundaries of 'community' in the community renewable energy projects: Navigating between motivations and context

A range of actors involved in energy transitions are increasingly interested in ‘community renewable energy’ (CRE) for a multitude of reasons. Energy Policy has published articles exploring CRE since 2008, including seminal pieces by Seyfang et al., 2013Walker and Devine-Wright, 2007.

CRE has proven to be a diverse field: having emerged in different contexts and having been driven by a range of motivators, it encapsulates a diversity of technological, organisational, economic and social features. Developing a working definition and delineating what can legitimately be considered CRE is difficult given its varied forms.

Drawing on interviews and document analysis with 25 case studies, we analyse the influence of context and motivations through the development process to understand the diversity of forms that lay claim to the ‘CRE’ title. Rather than a single definition, we propose a set of conceptual tools for thinking about this nuanced field. The tools analyse what constitutes ‘community’ RE, enabling proponents to expose the motivations and choices layered into different enactments of CRE in policy and practice.

This article contributes to developing a language and practice that can explicitly articulate what is meant by CRE, what forms of activity are pursued and why.

Access the article

CRCLCL Project Posters

Student poster 2016: RP3023 Community power: Understanding the contribution of community-owned renewable energy to small regional communities

Student poster - Participants Annual Forum 2016 - Jarra Hicks Community power: Understanding the contribution of community-owned renewable energy to small regional communities

Jarra Hicks Student Poster 2016 RP3023 (236476 PDF)


Student poster 2015: RP3023: Community owned renewable energy

Student poster - Participants Annual Forum 2015, Jarra Hicks

Community-owned renewable energy (core): A unique opportunity for regional communities?

Jarra Hicks student poster 2015 RP3023 (769584 PDF)


Research Snapshot Poster - RP3023

Research Snapshot A3 size poster from Participants Annual Forum 2014

Research Snapshot Poster - RP3023 (244211 PDF)


Student Poster 2014 - RP3023

Student Poster - Participants Annual Forum 2014, Jarra Hicks - Size A2

Student Poster 2014 - RP3023 (5178513 PDF)

Partners on this project

  • UNSW Sydney
  • NSW Government | Office of Environment & Heritage