Micro-hydro politics: Producing and contesting community energy in the North of England

Andrea Armstrong*, Harriet Bulkeley

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Analyses of the politics of energy production have traditionally focused on issues of resource extraction and large scale generation. Yet questions of politics are just as critical when it comes to considering the development of 'small' energy - variously referred to as micro-or distributed generation and frequently associated with the growing role of communities in the production of renewable energy. In this paper, we focus on a resource - a local river - to examine the ways in which a community-based project sought to produce it as a viable and legitimate source of energy production. Such an initiative, we find, is fraught with challenges. In particular, we identify three facets of the production of micro-hydro power that have been critical to its deployment and contestation. First, the means through which the hydro resource is calculated and valued. Second, the ways in which recasting the river in energy resource terms serves to challenge established notions of the river. Third, the identification of hydro power as a 'low carbon' energy resource has at once served to create new discourses about the role and responsibilities for using the river as an energy resource, whilst also calling into question its viability in the long term under conditions of climate change.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)66-76
Number of pages11
JournalGeoforum
Volume56
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2014
Externally publishedYes

Funding

We are very grateful to those who gave up their time to speak to us about community-based micro hydro, hydro in the UK and the Energyshare initiative. We would especially like to thank Hexham River Hydro, the Environment Agency and the Rivers Trust. We would also like to thank the Leverhulme Trust – without the funding from Professor Bulkeley’s Leverhulme Fellowship this project would not have been possible. Thank you also to the three anonymous referees for their encouraging and constructive comments that helped develop the paper.

Keywords

  • Community energy
  • Energy resources
  • Hexham river hydro
  • Micro-hydro
  • North of england
  • Politics of community energy production

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