Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumption

The energy ‘crisis’ in Switzerland during the winter of 2022–23 highlighted the need to integrate the idea of sufficiency into previously efficiency-focused discourses and policies. A mixed-methods approach was used to explore emerging sufficiency practices and energy justice. Qualitative interviews...

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Main Author: Alice Guilbert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2024-10-01
Series:Buildings & Cities
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Online Access:https://account.journal-buildingscities.org/index.php/up-j-bc/article/view/458
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author Alice Guilbert
author_facet Alice Guilbert
author_sort Alice Guilbert
collection DOAJ
description The energy ‘crisis’ in Switzerland during the winter of 2022–23 highlighted the need to integrate the idea of sufficiency into previously efficiency-focused discourses and policies. A mixed-methods approach was used to explore emerging sufficiency practices and energy justice. Qualitative interviews (n = 28) with a diverse range of households and building management companies (‘régies’) in Geneva, as well as a quantitative online survey, were undertaken in 2023. It was found that different measures and recommendations did lead to efforts to reduce energy consumption, but also revealed flaws as practices typically lacked an energy justice perspective. Important discrepancies occurred between low- and high-income groups, tenants and owners, inhabitants of houses and apartments. These included a misrecognition of some residents’ vulnerabilities, their limited agency and a lack of acknowledgment of differentiated responsibilities. This led to a negative impact on the implementation of sufficiency. Some residents were marginalised: feeling anxious, disregarded, powerless, belittled and hence excluded from collective sufficiency efforts. Policy relevance Policies and strategies for the implementation of energy sufficiency measures will not be effective unless they include energy justice issues. If sufficiency policies and strategies are to be effective, they must account for differing housing, tenure, socio-economic conditions, capabilities and tackle recognition-based injustices. Decision-making spaces and processes need to become more inclusive, particularly to represent more vulnerable people, include a broader range of the socio-economic population and account for differing responsibilities.
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spelling doaj-art-fd470ec1f850477ab183b5efcc1a9f8c2024-11-18T07:35:20ZengUbiquity PressBuildings & Cities2632-66552024-10-0151489–505489–50510.5334/bc.458458Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumptionAlice Guilbert0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4727-3244Environmental Governance and Territorial Development Hub/Institute, University of Geneva, GenevaThe energy ‘crisis’ in Switzerland during the winter of 2022–23 highlighted the need to integrate the idea of sufficiency into previously efficiency-focused discourses and policies. A mixed-methods approach was used to explore emerging sufficiency practices and energy justice. Qualitative interviews (n = 28) with a diverse range of households and building management companies (‘régies’) in Geneva, as well as a quantitative online survey, were undertaken in 2023. It was found that different measures and recommendations did lead to efforts to reduce energy consumption, but also revealed flaws as practices typically lacked an energy justice perspective. Important discrepancies occurred between low- and high-income groups, tenants and owners, inhabitants of houses and apartments. These included a misrecognition of some residents’ vulnerabilities, their limited agency and a lack of acknowledgment of differentiated responsibilities. This led to a negative impact on the implementation of sufficiency. Some residents were marginalised: feeling anxious, disregarded, powerless, belittled and hence excluded from collective sufficiency efforts. Policy relevance Policies and strategies for the implementation of energy sufficiency measures will not be effective unless they include energy justice issues. If sufficiency policies and strategies are to be effective, they must account for differing housing, tenure, socio-economic conditions, capabilities and tackle recognition-based injustices. Decision-making spaces and processes need to become more inclusive, particularly to represent more vulnerable people, include a broader range of the socio-economic population and account for differing responsibilities.https://account.journal-buildingscities.org/index.php/up-j-bc/article/view/458energy justiceenergy transitionequityheatinghousinginequalityrecognition justicesocial justicesufficiencyvulnerability
spellingShingle Alice Guilbert
Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumption
Buildings & Cities
energy justice
energy transition
equity
heating
housing
inequality
recognition justice
social justice
sufficiency
vulnerability
title Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumption
title_full Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumption
title_fullStr Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumption
title_full_unstemmed Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumption
title_short Energy sufficiency and recognition justice: a study of household consumption
title_sort energy sufficiency and recognition justice a study of household consumption
topic energy justice
energy transition
equity
heating
housing
inequality
recognition justice
social justice
sufficiency
vulnerability
url https://account.journal-buildingscities.org/index.php/up-j-bc/article/view/458
work_keys_str_mv AT aliceguilbert energysufficiencyandrecognitionjusticeastudyofhouseholdconsumption