Urban electricity governance and the (re)production of heterogeneous electricity constellations in Dar es Salaam

IF 4.6 3区 工程技术 Q2 ENERGY & FUELS
Mathias Koepke, Jochen Monstadt, Francesca Pilo’
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Electricity infrastructures in sub-Saharan African cities are characterized by heterogeneous socio-technical constellations, including alternative grid access channels and off-grid systems. These constellations secure access beyond conventional grids but also produce adverse social, environmental, and economic outcomes affecting sustainable energy transition efforts. In fact, interventions aiming to promote energy transitions may be restricted by institutional mechanisms that produce and maintain these heterogeneous constellations. This article explores these institutional mechanisms by focusing on the governance of heterogeneous electricity constellations in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. It develops a novel framework on governance modalities to understand and explain the logics, mechanisms, and actors that govern different constellations across diverse neighborhoods as well as to unpack how they limit the potential of sustainable energy transitions and offer specific opportunities for them.

Results

This article is based on a qualitative case study covering three diverse neighborhood types in Dar es Salaam (i.e., low-income, peri-urban, and affluent areas) that reflect heterogeneous user demands. The research draws on interviews with residents and community leaders to understand local modes of coordination, the participatory observation of technical features and user practices, as well as document sources and semi-structured expert interviews to analyze institutional aspects. Our study demonstrates that heterogeneous electricity constellations in Dar es Salaam are governed by the place-based interplay of four governance modalities: hierarchical, market-based, network-based, and managerial governance. Based on this conceptualization, we identified critical barriers for interventions toward urban energy transitions in the context of infrastructural heterogeneity, namely, conflicting logics that shape conventional grid services, complex and fragmented actor constellations, and diverging, place-based interests among various actors, including different state actors.

Conclusions

Our study indicates that heterogeneous urban infrastructure constellations are not merely a response to the considerable socio-spatial inequalities within Southern cities. Rather, their prevailing importance and (re)production must be understood as resulting from the interplay of various governance modalities. The study contributes to debates on urban energy transitions in sub-Sahara Africa by explaining the institutional complexity associated with infrastructural heterogeneity, which can restrict interventions aiming to improve and universalize service provision through heterogeneous urban electricity constellations.

达累斯萨拉姆的城市电力治理和异构电力星座的(再)生产
背景撒哈拉以南非洲城市的电力基础设施具有异质性的社会技术星座,包括替代电网接入渠道和离网系统。这些电网确保了传统电网之外的电力供应,但也产生了不利的社会、环境和经济后果,影响了可持续能源转型的努力。事实上,旨在促进能源转换的干预措施可能会受到产生和维持这些异质星座的体制机制的限制。本文通过关注坦桑尼亚达累斯萨拉姆异构电力系统的治理,探讨了这些体制机制。它开发了一个关于治理模式的新框架,以理解和解释管理不同社区不同星座的逻辑、机制和参与者,并揭示它们如何限制可持续能源转型的潜力,并为它们提供具体的机会。本文基于一项定性案例研究,该研究涵盖了达累斯萨拉姆三种不同的社区类型(即低收入、城郊和富裕地区),反映了不同的用户需求。本研究通过对居民和社区领导人的访谈来了解当地的协调模式,通过对技术特征和用户实践的参与式观察,以及文献来源和半结构化专家访谈来分析制度方面的问题。我们的研究表明,达累斯萨拉姆的异质电力系统受到四种治理模式的地方相互作用的支配:等级治理、市场治理、网络治理和管理治理。基于这一概念,我们确定了在基础设施异质性背景下干预城市能源转型的关键障碍,即形成传统电网服务的冲突逻辑,复杂和碎片化的行为者群体,以及不同行为者(包括不同的国家行为者)之间基于地点的利益分歧。我们的研究表明,异质性的城市基础设施集群不仅仅是对南方城市中相当大的社会空间不平等的回应。相反,它们的普遍重要性和(再)生产必须被理解为各种治理模式相互作用的结果。该研究通过解释与基础设施异质性相关的制度复杂性,有助于对撒哈拉以南非洲城市能源转型的讨论,这可能会限制旨在通过异质城市电力系统改善和普及服务提供的干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Energy, Sustainability and Society
Energy, Sustainability and Society Energy-Energy Engineering and Power Technology
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
4.10%
发文量
45
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Energy, Sustainability and Society is a peer-reviewed open access journal published under the brand SpringerOpen. It covers topics ranging from scientific research to innovative approaches for technology implementation to analysis of economic, social and environmental impacts of sustainable energy systems.
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