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Justice aspects of flexible household electricity consumption in future smart energy systems

Ingvild Firman Fjellså, Antti Silvast, Tomas Moe Skjølsvold

2020Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As energy transitions advance through the introduction of renewable energy production and new types of energy demands, expectations for more flexible electricity consumption has risen on agendas among system designers and scholars. Social scientists have followed this development through studies of technological visions and users of new flexibility techniques (e.g. demand-side management, pricing, storage). Based on interviews with electricity systems developers and householders in Norway this article complements this body of scholarship and relates it to emerging themes in sustainability transitions research. We focus on end-user flexibility and operationalize the new concept of flexibility capital, developed within energy justice literature, to examine different framings of flexibility. The research examines how some householders have more capability of being flexible than others. Furthermore, we show how consumer understandings of flexibility are embedded in everyday life, and differs from systems developers, who primarily understands flexibility as acting economically rational and making cost-conscious decisions.

Topics & Concepts

Flexibility (engineering)OperationalizationScholarshipVisionSustainabilityElectricityEnvironmental economicsConsumption (sociology)Everyday lifeRenewable energyEconomicsIndustrial organizationMarketingBusinessSociologyPublic economicsEconomic growthEngineeringPolitical scienceSocial scienceManagementElectrical engineeringLawEpistemologyBiologyEcologyAnthropologyPhilosophySustainability and Climate Change GovernanceSmart Grid Energy ManagementSocial Acceptance of Renewable Energy
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