posted on 2023-07-26, 16:15authored byLuke Gooding, Patrick Devine-Wright, Melanie Rohse, Rebecca Ford, Chad Walker, Iain Soutar, Hannah Devine-Wright
To be fair, acceptable and ultimately successful, decentralised energy projects involving technological innovations require engagement with users, local communities
and wider publics. Yet relatively few studies have adopted a dynamic, temporal approach to understand how publics are engaged with as projects develop over time.
We address this gap by researching three case studies of ‘Smart Local Energy System’ (SLES) demonstrator projects involving combinations of power, heat and
transport technologies funded under a UK government programme. Guided by literature on public engagement methods and rationales, as well as how users and
communities are framed by stakeholders, we track engagement approaches over time from stages of project initiation to technology deployment. Engagement defined
as communication and consultation predominates over participation and community empowerment, with instrumental rationales used to frame publics as consumers
enabling technology deployment. Disruptions to engagement attributed to external factors such as the COVID-19 pandemic and BREXIT were interpreted both
positively and negatively, including the implications of disruptions for social inclusion and fairness. The potential for SLES to catalyse broader social transformations
in a context of environment and climate emergency is discussed.