This thesis investigates how rural communities negotiate the development of renewable
energy projects. Public and local community acceptance of these new technologies in rural
areas around the world is uncertain and spatially uneven and represents an area of
emerging public policy interest and one where scholarly theory is rapidly developing. This
thesis uses Habermasian concepts of public sphere, communicative action and
deliberative democracy, as well as the concept of “wicked problems” from the planning
studies literature combined with geographical concepts of place and scale to advance
theoretical and empirical understanding of how public opinion on renewable energy
technologies is formed in place. It documents energy use patterns, attitudes and sociopolitical relations at a time when considerable state and business efforts are directed at the construction of solar, wind, biomass and small-hydro technologies in rural regions.
These concepts and theories are applied in a case study of rural communities in the
Eastern Ontario Highlands, an impoverished area undergoing rapid restructuring driven by
centralization of services and amenity migration but with abundant natural resources in form of forests, numerous waterways and open space which have attracted a broad range
of new energy developments. Overall high levels of support for alternative energy development particularly for solar power were found, albeit for reasons of local energy security and not for reasons of preventing climate change. There was some evidence that seasonal residents are less supportive of hydro and biomass projects than permanent residents possibly reflecting broader trends in rural economies away from productive uses of land to consumptive appreciation of rural landscapes.
The thesis suggests that collective action to advance energy projects in the case study area
require agreement along three world-claims (truth, rightness and truthfulness) and that
communication leading to discourse which uncovers hitherto hidden reasons for action is
possible. These findings offer rare empirical evidence of the predictions of deliberative
democratic theory in environmental planning settings. However, multiple barriers to
communicative action were also identified and there is evidence that the state’s reliance
on market incentives may have long term costs in terms of diminished public reasoning
around renewable energy.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/24297 |
Date | January 2013 |
Creators | Fast, Stewart |
Contributors | Mcleman, Robert |
Publisher | Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa |
Source Sets | Université d’Ottawa |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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