The Greek Crisis and its effects on energy poverty
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Saska Petrova University of Manchester
Acknowledgments to Alexandra Prodromidou, City College, Thessaloniki
The Greek Crisis and its effects on energy poverty ! ! ! Saska - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
The Greek Crisis and its effects on energy poverty ! ! ! Saska Petrova University of Manchester Acknowledgments to Alexandra Prodromidou, City College, Thessaloniki Recent Papers Petrova, S., Torres Garcia, M., Bouzarovski, S. (2016)
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Acknowledgments to Alexandra Prodromidou, City College, Thessaloniki
Petrova, S., Torres Garcia, M., Bouzarovski, S. (2016) "Using action research to enhance learning on end-use energy demand: lessons from reflective practice." Environmental Education Research. Bouzarovski, S, and Petrova, S. (2015) "A global perspective on domestic energy deprivation: Overcoming the energy poverty-fuel poverty binary." Energy Research & Social Science 10: 31-40. Bouzarovski, S, Tirado Herrero, S, Petrova, S, and Urge-Vorsatz, D.(2015) "Unpacking the spaces and politics of energy poverty: path-dependencies, deprivation and fuel switching in post- communist Hungary." Local Environment(2015). Petrova, S. (2014) "Contesting forest neoliberalization: Recombinant geographies of 'illegal' logging in the Balkans." Geoforum 55(2014) : 13-21. Petrova S, Posova D, Sykora L, House A. (2013) "Discursive Framings of Low Carbon Urban Transitions: The Contested Geographies of 'Satellite Settlements' in the Czech Republic." Urban Studies 50, no. 7(2013) : 1439-1455. Petrova, S, Gentile, M, Makinen, IH, Bouzarovski, S. (2013) "Perceptions of thermal comfort and housing quality: exploring the microgeographies of energy poverty in Stakhanov, Ukraine." Environment and Planning A 45, no. 5(2013) : 1240-1257
EVALUATE: Energy Vulnerability and Urban Transitions in Europe (2013-2018), funded by the European Research Council - scrutinises the manner in which urban institutional structures, built tissues and everyday practices shape energy vulnerability at a variety of geographical scales. DOMESTIC NEXUS: Unpacking the interconnectivity of energy and water demand (2016), funded by the University of Manchester Humanities Strategic Investment Research Fund - explores the everyday consumption of energy and water in the context of urban, peri-urban and rural transformations in post-socialist countries with fast increasing economies. SA-URBATRANS: Urban Transformation in South Africa Through Co- Designing Energy Services Provision Pathways (2016-2019), funded by ESRC-NRF - investigates the dynamics and co-evolution of municipal processes so as to create pathways to new, greener and fairer urban energy
technical transitions and on energy geographies to analyse and identify energy transition pathways towards municipal-scale energy services regimes. !
necessitated levels of energy services in the home.
prices, incomes and energy efficiency, and mostly in relation to domestic heating (Bouzarovski and Petrova 2015).
with children, people with long-term illnesses (Liddell 2012).
debates.
traditional’ groups !!
Primary renewables Mechanical power Solid fuels, derivatives Liquid fuels, derivatives Natural gas, derivatives Electric power Secondary heat Space heating Water heating Space cooling Refrigeration Cooking Drying Lighting Appliances IT
System of provision
Conversion to ‘useful’ energy Household demand
Indirect energy services
Carriers Services
carriers, and even non-energy services
Popke 2011) of social and technical networks across multiple scales
functionings
Access: Poor availability of energy carriers appropriate to meet household needs (e.g. underdeveloped gas networks) Affordability: High ratio between cost of fuels and household incomes, including role of tax systems or assistance schemes Flexibility: Inability to switch among different carriers so as to respond to household needs or other constraints Efficiency: Disproportionately high loss of useful energy during energy conversions in the home Needs: Mismatch between household energy requirements and available energy services; for social, cultural, economic or health reasons Practices: Normativities and routines surrounding lighting in the home
Primary renewables Mechanical power Solid fuels, derivatives Liquid fuels, derivatives Natural gas, derivatives Electric power Secondary heat Space heating Water heating Space cooling Refrigeration Cooking Drying Lighting Appliances IT
System of provision
Conversion to ‘useful’ energy Household demand
Indirect energy services
Carriers Services
Access Affordability Needs Practices Efficiency Flexibility
and financial aspects of the crisis (Gialis and Leontidou, 2014; Knight, 2013; Mavroudeas, 2014; Mylonas, 2014) and the development of political resistance (Dalakoglou and Kallianos, 2014; Douzinas, 2013)
means of exploration and interpretation of the economic crisis
mathematical models using hard data (Papagaroufali, 2011).
experiences and coping strategies in periods of crisis Georgakopoulou (2014)
Source: Based on Eurostat
Lack of academic research focusing on the micro- perspectives of the crisis, which explores what has been happening in the homes and communities of ordinary people in Greece (Kaika, 2012; Rakopoulos, 2014)
‘A group of people who belonged, until recently, to the middle classes, but were spitted out from these ranks as they lost their jobs, took massive cuts in their salaries or pensions, or had their homes repossessed.’ (Kaika 2012, p. 423) The challenges faced by this new social class are not created by the ‘abstract crisis’ (Rakopoulos 2014) but by the imposed austerity regime (Stuckler and Basu 2013)
publicized dimensions of the crisis
arrangements that do not allow for improving the efficiency of the housing stock, or switching towards more affordable fuels (Katsoulakos, 2011; Santamouris et al., 2014, 2013, 2007)
discount; 7% of the customers eligible to use them
energy efficiency in the residential sector; lower income households could receive up to 70% subsidy for the interventions in their home
Vulnerable households:
than 12,000 €)
total annual electricity consumption less than 6,800 kWh)
23,500 €; total annual electricity consumption less than 6,800 kWh) Benefits:
result of austerity policies opens the space for non-market and informal economic strategies (Gibson-Graham 1996)
‘experiments’ (Anastasopoulos 2013)!
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infrastructures of everyday life?
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Field research undertaken in 2013 and 2014 under the EVENT project and in 2015 Two sets of interviews and ‘energy diaries’ with 25 households, including 77 people in Thessaloniki Analysis of documentary evidence, 10 decision-maker interviews !
included in the research were suffering from a lack of adequate energy services in the home
privately rented housing is also conditioned by multiple demographic and housing factors specific to this group
Energy poverty beyond space heating and thermal comfort
energy services (especially information technology)
Services (Devices) Share (%) Electrical Cooker 38.4 Lighting 6.4 Laundry 10.6 Dishwasher 3.6 Refrigerator 14.7 Other uses 9.1 Services (Devices) Expenditure by device in 2012 - average household (€/year) Electrical Cooker 214.56 Lighting 35.76 Laundry 59.23 Dishwasher 20.12 Refrigerator 82.14 Other uses 50.85
Source: Based on the Survey for Household energy consumption, Hellenic Statistical Authority
Energy poverty beyond affordability and energy efficiency
care for co-habitants shaped the everyday practices of energy demand beyond narrow economic factors (e.g. earnings
‘We were planning to move to a better apartment, but our current neighbours help us with our children’ (35 year old ambulance driver)
Community resources: The beating heart of alternative economies
‘I would not be able to afford a place on my own. I am only posh when I am together with my partner.’ (37 year old woman, secretary) t
‘Sometimes I go over to a friend’s house to warm up.’ (52 year old woman, homemaker) ‘We were planning to move to a better apartment, but our current neighbours help us with our children.’ (35 year old man, ambulance driver)
! ‘If things get worse in the future I will go back to my village to live.’ (55 year old man, part time accountant) ‘We stay in our flat during the week and on the weekends we go to
woman, secretary)
discipline, a mode of self-control that always serves to regulate one’s own precariousness (Vasudevan 2015): familiar strategies and practices from the past
‘I have neither the time nor the patience to cook on/in the [wood]
stove’ (50 year old self-employed woman) ‘During that period when I had to limit it we had an average temperature of 19 degrees in the house. It was borderline tolerable and not at all normal for us, because my mother is sick (and she needs proper heating). While with pellets we have 24 degrees of heating.’ (40 year self-employed woman)
Needs and practices surrounding lighting used as a tool for the construction of crisis and as a mechanism for controlling vulnerable groups
Energy poverty widespread in the case study area and closely contingent upon everyday spaces of informality The lack of energy service provision alters the patterns of energy demand and creates alternative territories and spaces of resource consumption Lighting is an integral part of the rise of energy poverty and an instrument of
construction of crisis and as a mechanism for controlling vulnerable groups The ability to switch to different carriers offers opportunities for resistance and resilience The intensification of collective agencies goes hand in hand with the rise of diverse economies and new locally embedded practices
Saska.petrova@manchester.ac.uk http://urban-energy.org @curemanchester