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About the Project

Energy, Society, and Policy Initiative
Energy
system transformation seems, at this moment in history, inevitable.
While widespread disagreements exist over the nature of the current
energy crisis and possible alternative energy pathways, few disagree
that the combination of the Iraq war and climate change have dealt a
one-two punch to long-term viability of the current energy system and
especially its reliance on oil. As a consequence, enormous investments
are now being made in energy system research and development, including
renewable and other carbon free energy sources (nuclear, solar, wind,
hydrogen); biomass energy systems, which are carbon neutral; and carbon
capture and sequestration systems. Whichever combination of these
arrangements wins—and there may, in fact, be a long period in which a
dynamic mix of technologies wins—some kind of change is seen as
essential to put human society on a sustainable foundation for the
future.
At the
Energy, Society and Policy Initiative (ESPI), our emphasis is on the
social dynamics of energy system transformation and on appropriate
policy development to ensure that processes of energy system
transformation contribute to the solution of wider and deeper forms of
societal injustice within which energy systems have long held a central
position. Like all technological systems, energy systems are not just
systems of machinery; they are also intimately interwoven into people’s
lives, livelihoods, and lifestyles. People from all walks of life, in
all parts of the globe, are employees and consumers of and investors in
energy systems. Energy systems are enormous generators of wealth,
generating at the same time massive cycles of boom and bust in local
economies. Energy system are global in reach, connecting individual
lives and livelihoods at sites of production, conversion, distribution,
and consumption in a web of intricate social, economic, and political
relationships. Energy policy must therefore account not only for the
technology and economics of energy systems but their social
relationships and forms of justice and injustice. Only by so doing might
it be possible to achieve energy system transformation that achieves the
best outcomes not only for technical and economic efficiency but also
for human wellbeing and welfare.
Our
objective in ESPI is to establish a strong program of research and
policy engagement that seeks to understand and analyze the social
dynamics of past, present, and future energy systems and to develop and
design reflexive mechanisms of energy systems governance by which
humanistic and social science research can inform the process of energy
system transformation to create enhanced societal outcomes around the
globe.
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