Empowering Electricity

Co-operatives, Sustainability, and Power Sector Reform in Canada

By Julie L. MacArthur
Categories: Environmental Politics & Policy, Political Science, Science
Series: Sustainability and the Environment
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774831437, 276 pages, June 2016
Paperback : 9780774831444, 276 pages, January 2017
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774831451, 276 pages, July 2016
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774831468, 276 pages, July 2016
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774831475, 276 pages, July 2016

Table of contents

Preface and Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

1 A Climate for Change

2 Governing Sustainability: From Crisis to Empowerment

3 Co-operatives in Canadian Political Economy

4 International Forces for Power-Sector Restructuring

5 Continental, Private, and Green(er)? Canadian Electricity Restructuring

6 Electricity Co-operatives: The Power of Public Policy

7 Off the Ground and on the Grid: New Electricity Co-operative Development

8 Co-operative Networks and the Politics of Community Power

9 Empowering Electricity

Appendices

Notes

Glossary

References

Index

This revealing analysis of Canada’s electrical power co-operatives shines a light on the promises and challenges facing their development.

Description

Since the 1990s, there has been an upsurge in renewable electricity co-operatives across Canada as hundreds of community organizations have turned to the sun, wind, and rivers as sources of local power generation. Empowering Electricity offers an illuminating analysis of these co-operatives within the context of larger debates over climate change, renewable electricity policy, sustainable community development, and provincial power-sector ownership. It looks at the conditions that led to this new wave of co-operative development, examines their form and location, and shines a light on the promises and challenges accompanying their development.

Reviews

Empowering Electricity is an empirically-grounded contribution to the literature on citizen engagement and energy policy in Canada. In particular, it provides a fresh take on BC energy politics that gets beyond the entrenched public/private dichotomy to explore one possible middle ground. While MacArthur implies that electricity co-operatives have the potential to erode public power in BC, her suggestion of co-operatives partnering with municipalities and First Nations may actually offer a new, politically viable approach to public power develpment that is both more democratic and locally acceptable than the current model.

- Nichole Dusyk