Building local and community energy
Building local and community energy
Māori and local communities have
a vital role to play in New Zealand’s transition to a low
carbon economy.
That is the view of University
of Auckland politics lecturer Dr Julie MacArthur and
sociologist Dr Steve Matthewman who have initiated New
Zealand’s first forum for Local and Community Energy,
meeting in Wellington later this month.
“Māori in particular are already engaged in geothermal energy, energy sufficiency and community energy projects,” says Dr McArthur. She has just finished mapping community-owned energy projects across New Zealand.
“For example Ngati Tuwharetoa Geothermal Assets in Kawarau is the largest provider of direct geothermal steam to industry in the world.
“It is quite unique here compared with other countries,” she says. “Nowhere else in the world are indigenous people invested in, and running, geothermal projects.”
At the other end of the scale, Awarua Synergy at Bluff owned by local iwi, is retrofitting homes with insulation and recently put up a small wind turbine at the Te Rūnaka o Awarua Marae.
“If you own energy assets you generate a whole lot of other positives, such as control over design, siting, reinvesting profits in the community, as well as education and training,” says Dr McArthur.
She and Dr Matthewman are each working on Marsden-funded research projects focused on how energy infrastructures can serve social and economic as well as climate and disaster-related needs.
“Relative to its importance, energy studies is a very poorly developed area in the social sciences,” says Dr Matthewman. His project is looking at how to build renewable energies and social capital working at the local level in post-earthquake Christchurch.
“There is a lot of theory worldwide about local ownership; people are more likely to get involved if they have ownership,” he says,
“And this is about human behaviours, complex systems and vested interests.”
Adds Dr MacArthur: “People hear energy and focus on technology, often forgetting that it is people who use, fund, design, and develop the technology. The success of energy transitions rests on understanding people, and their governments, which is what Arts academics are trained for.”
Keen to know how New Zealand can support community energy, Dr MacArthur is now doing a comparative study into how other countries are supporting indigenous efforts and what kinds of policies they adopt to kick-start these innovations.
The New
Zealand Forum for Local & Community Energy will take place
on
24 August 2018
Notes to editor
The Local and Community Forum is funded by the University of Auckland’s Public Policy Institute and organised with Dr Anna Berka and Dr Stephen Poletti from the University’s Energy Centre and Dr Maria Bargh from Victoria University’s School of Māori Studies. It will bring together policy-makers, local authorities, Māori and community organisations to share best practice and find out what is needed for community energy to flourish on a practical level. The researchers will produce a policy brief and research report following the event that will be available through the Public Policy Institute.