Local engagement and success of small-scale renewable energy projects in remote areas: insights from Ramea’s wind energy projects

Access to clean, affordable, and sustainable energy remains a significant challenge in off-grid areas across the world. As the energy transition progresses, relevant stakeholders in the energy sector have acknowledged the potential of small-scale renewable energy (SSRE) in addressing this challenge....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ature, Abdul- Rasheed Abubakari
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/15351/
https://research.library.mun.ca/15351/1/thesis.pdf
Description
Summary:Access to clean, affordable, and sustainable energy remains a significant challenge in off-grid areas across the world. As the energy transition progresses, relevant stakeholders in the energy sector have acknowledged the potential of small-scale renewable energy (SSRE) in addressing this challenge. However, studies have demonstrated situations where the development and uptake of some SSRE schemes fail to realize their intended purposes, especially due to ineffective local engagement by project proponents, and partly to capacity gaps of beneficiaries. Leveraging the cases of two wind energy demonstration projects in the Town of Ramea, Newfoundland and Labrador (NL), this thesis investigates how the projects’ proponents engaged the community in the activities of the projects. It also explores the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) of the projects, intending to unearth key factors that can impact the successes or failures of test projects. By using document reviews, site observation, and in-depth interviews with the various stakeholders of the projects, the study established that there was an early, genuine, and multi-faceted engagement with the local community. The community’s premium wind resources, coupled with both local and external interest in wind energy development, present key opportunities for the energy transition in the Town. Despite contributing to a reduction in the use of diesel, creation of employment, and the development of wind-hydrogen-diesel integration control technology, one of the projects has been discontinued due to technical challenges with part of the project’s equipment. Competing energy priorities, rate uniformity in NL, and large-sized diesel engines in Ramea significantly challenged the optimum integration of wind energy in the island’s electricity grid and limited the benefits the community enjoys from the projects. I conclude that effective local engagement may not be enough to ensure the success of SSRE projects in off-grid areas, recognizing that the ...