2020
DOI: 10.1177/0971721820903006
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‘We Do Not Want Fake Energy’: The Social Shaping of a Solar Micro-grid in Rural India

Abstract: During the last two decades, numerous policy actors have advocated multiple models for the diffusion of solar energy-based technologies in India. In recent years, the social development-based energy business model was promoted by some NGOs, civil society groups and academicians for reaching the poor for meeting their energy needs. Using a case study approach, this article explores the social shaping of a solar micro-grid established in rural Bihar through the hybrid model of environmental governance. The artic… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
(65 reference statements)
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“…Short‐term future uses that rely on commercial viability and substantial infrastructure investment such as floating PV panels, aquaculture, or pumped hydro may be politically attractive, but are unlikely to be sustainable given the ongoing costs. In remote, developing, or disenfranchised communities these schemes may become “white elephants” (e.g., Sharma, 2020). However, pit lakes have the potential to become valuable assets for generations, such as the more than 50 unique pit lakes that compose the lignite mining district of the former German Democratic Republic (Weber, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Short‐term future uses that rely on commercial viability and substantial infrastructure investment such as floating PV panels, aquaculture, or pumped hydro may be politically attractive, but are unlikely to be sustainable given the ongoing costs. In remote, developing, or disenfranchised communities these schemes may become “white elephants” (e.g., Sharma, 2020). However, pit lakes have the potential to become valuable assets for generations, such as the more than 50 unique pit lakes that compose the lignite mining district of the former German Democratic Republic (Weber, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An ethnographic analysis of the installation of solar micro-grids in rural northern India, for example, demonstrates significant variation in how developers and users understand both problem and solution (Sharma 2020). While the Indian government, national NGOs, and even local elites believed the solar technologies would provide crucial, clean energy resources while reducing environmental pollution, lowerincome residents with the most urgent energy needs were the most opposed.…”
Section: An Sts Approach To Menstrual Health Innovationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The social field of a microgrid relates to the complex socio-cultural aspects around its implementation [212]. The literature points to the notion of social acceptance as a simple way to express the shaping of a community to a new technology [213] despite a lack of consensus on its definition [214,215].…”
Section: Social Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%