Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada

Governments today are increasingly looking to non-state and bottom up community actors to help achieve climate change mitigation targets. Canada is a resource rich state with one of the highest per capita greenhouse gas footprints in the world. It is also a state where issues of political will, geog...

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Main Author: Julie L. MacArthur
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/3/464
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spelling doaj-28590425fe1e4eecb01914d1602478362020-11-25T00:17:39ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502017-03-019346410.3390/su9030464su9030464Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in CanadaJulie L. MacArthur0School of Social Sciences, University of Auckland, Human Sciences 541, 10 Symonds Street, Auckland 1010, New ZealandGovernments today are increasingly looking to non-state and bottom up community actors to help achieve climate change mitigation targets. Canada is a resource rich state with one of the highest per capita greenhouse gas footprints in the world. It is also a state where issues of political will, geographic scale and incumbent industries contribute to a challenging context for broad community participation. Despite this, a long history of co-operative and municipal activity exists in the energy sector, exhibited in diverse ways across its provinces and territories. Provincial variation in energy sources and actors illustrates a far more nuanced picture than exists at the national level, providing a case rich with both promising and cautionary tales for the community energy sector. This article examines the emergence of community energy in the context of broader energy sector moves towards increasingly powerful trade agreements, privatization, and conflicts over Indigenous rights in Canada. It argues that significant potential exists to strengthen the role of local actors in Canadian energy governance, but that macro-level political and economic developments have also created significant challenges for widespread community energy transitions.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/3/464community energyenergy policyCanadapolitical economyrenewable electricitypublic participation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julie L. MacArthur
spellingShingle Julie L. MacArthur
Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada
Sustainability
community energy
energy policy
Canada
political economy
renewable electricity
public participation
author_facet Julie L. MacArthur
author_sort Julie L. MacArthur
title Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada
title_short Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada
title_full Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada
title_fullStr Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada
title_sort trade, tarsands and treaties: the political economy context of community energy in canada
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Governments today are increasingly looking to non-state and bottom up community actors to help achieve climate change mitigation targets. Canada is a resource rich state with one of the highest per capita greenhouse gas footprints in the world. It is also a state where issues of political will, geographic scale and incumbent industries contribute to a challenging context for broad community participation. Despite this, a long history of co-operative and municipal activity exists in the energy sector, exhibited in diverse ways across its provinces and territories. Provincial variation in energy sources and actors illustrates a far more nuanced picture than exists at the national level, providing a case rich with both promising and cautionary tales for the community energy sector. This article examines the emergence of community energy in the context of broader energy sector moves towards increasingly powerful trade agreements, privatization, and conflicts over Indigenous rights in Canada. It argues that significant potential exists to strengthen the role of local actors in Canadian energy governance, but that macro-level political and economic developments have also created significant challenges for widespread community energy transitions.
topic community energy
energy policy
Canada
political economy
renewable electricity
public participation
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/3/464
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