New report and policy brief on facilitating inclusive and just energy transitions

On 25 September 2024 the ESRC funded CESET project held a workshop at the Royal Society London to launch its policy recommendations on the role of community energy in mediating sustainable energy transitions. Watch the 'live' report of discussions.

Professor Vanesa Castán Broto gave a welcome lecture on "realising the benefits of community energy for a just energy transition", followed by a keynote by Professor Yacob Mulugetta on "community energy in the just transitions agenda". You can watch the recording of these presentations on the CESET YouTube Channel

The workshop explored the potential of off-grid solutions and energy communities to deliver the objectives of Sustainable Development Goal 7: to ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for all. The workshop aimed to produce policy guidelines for including off-grid solutions and community energy in energy transition strategies, identify new research opportunities, influence discussions at the UN Climate Change Conference Baku (COP29), and, in the long term, convene follow-up discussions at the COP30 in Belém do Pará in 2025. While the project has a global focus, practical discussions focussed on ongoing examples of off-grid projects and strategies in Ethiopia, Malawi, and Mozambique.

In the morning, participants shared their experiences of community energy and the barriers faced because of the lack of policy frameworks, supply chain challenges, limited resources, and community engagement and leadership. In the afternoon, participants collaborated in an interactive workshop to explore creative strategies to respond to those challenges within academia, practice, and donor policies. 

Key policy recommendations are: 

  1. The development of community energy projects at scale requires the support of a wide range of regional and local institutions that can mediate the gap between global opportunities and local implementation, but capacity and skills need to be improved at the local level.
  2. Donors could develop a dynamic finance landscape to integrate community energy projects in the energy transition.
  3. Measures to maintain supply chains promote community energy development because most projects depend on technology and resource imports.
  4. Community energy’s outcomes often target specifically marginalised or vulnerable groups, such as those suffering discrimination due to gender, origin, race, level of ability, or sexual orientation, which would not be reached otherwise.

Read the policy brief

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