January 7, 2025
Journal Article

Who will be making wave energy? A community-driven design approach toward just and sustainable energy futures in Alaska

Abstract

Renewable energy transition, once thought of as a singular, large-scale switch in industrial energy generating technologies from fossil fuels to renewables, have gained a broader set of requirements, including the need for justice and environmen- tal protection. While discourse around policy and process has grown to consider these requirements, the focus of design of new renewable energy projects and technologies remains dominantly fixed on maximizing energy production, and renew- ables are falling short of meeting the requirements of just energy transitions. Meanwhile, in design studies, participatory and co-design approaches which explicitly consider justice in both process and outcomes have long been theorized and applied. However, applications of these approaches to renewable energy project design are under-theorized. In this paper, we explore the effectiveness of the adoption and adaptation of a co-design approach called Community-Driven Design (CDD) in enabling meaningful participation prior to technological maturity and bringing the attention of designers to a more diverse set of energy futures focused on justice and sustainability. We do so by developing and testing the approach with community members in Sitka, AK, USA. We conclude that the approach has the potential to increase meaningful participation. Furthermore, we con- clude that through diverse understandings of energy and the emergence of design narratives that engage with the complexity of vulnerability, accountability, and resilience, CDD led designers to consider justice, sustainability, and a diverse set of possible energy futures both within and beyond Sitka.

Published: January 7, 2025

Citation

Trueworthy A.M., A. McCarrel, J. Wieliczkiewicz, S. Cellan, W. Peterson, S. Anderson, and B. Dupont, et al. 2024. Who will be making wave energy? A community-driven design approach toward just and sustainable energy futures in Alaska. Energy Research & Social Science 115, no. _:Art. No. 103615. PNNL-SA-197930. doi:10.1016/j.erss.2024.103615

Research topics