"一个都不能少"。从电力能力和能源公正的角度看柬埔寨偏远农村社区的能源转型

IF 5.4 1区 经济学 Q1 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES World Development Pub Date : 2024-10-07 DOI:10.1016/j.worlddev.2024.106793
Giuseppina Siciliano , Roberto Cantoni , Pichdara Lonn , Narith Por , Solany Kry , Chimmor Morn , Ham Oudom
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去二十年里,柬埔寨的电力供应大幅增加。柬埔寨电力局宣布,该国的能源普及率已从 2010 年的 34% 提高到 2022 年中期的 98%,但仍有 245 个村庄由于地处偏远而无法接入国家配电网络。对于其中一些村庄来说,离网可再生能源系统在提供电力供应方面发挥了重要作用。然而,将村庄接入电网或为其提供离网可再生能源并不足以克服能源贫困和实现人民福祉。在本文中,我们运用电力能力-能源公正框架,分析了偏远社区可再生能源和能源贫困的社会公正问题。基于通过访谈和焦点小组讨论收集到的原始数据,并利用社会网络分析(SNA),我们将柬埔寨的能力和能源贫困作为一个关系过程来研究,并首次提供了柬埔寨能源行业中社会和权力关系的全貌。我们的研究发现,偏远农村地区的社区和弱势群体(如女户主家庭)正在遭受能源分配不公,因为他们只能获得有限的能源服务来满足基本能力的需求,如健康、受教育和社会联系。我们还发现,能源分配不公与柬埔寨能源部门的权力关系和关联性以及能源政策中缺乏对不同脆弱性的认识密切相关。
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“Leave no one behind”. A power-capabilities-energy justice perspective on energy transition in remote rural communities in Cambodia
Over the past two decades electricity access in Cambodia has increased considerably. The Electricity Authority of Cambodia has announced that the country expanded energy access from 34% in 2010 to 98% by mid-2022, but that 245 villages still lack access to the national distribution network due to their remoteness. For some of these villages, off-grid renewable energy systems have played a significant role in providing electricity access. However, connecting villages to the grid or providing them with off-grid renewable energy is not enough to overcome energy poverty and achieve people’s well-being. In this paper we apply a power-capabilities-energy justice framework to analyse social justice concerning renewable energy and energy poverty in remote communities. Based on primary data collected through interviews and focus group discussions, and using a social network analysis (SNA) we approach capabilities and energy poverty in Cambodia as a relational process and we provide for the first time a through picture of social and power relations in the Cambodian energy sector. Our study finds that communities and vulnerable groups such as female-headed households, located in remote rural areas are suffering distributional energy injustice in that they have access to a limited range of energy services to fulfil basic capabilities, such as being in good health, being educated and socially connected. We also find that distributional energy injustice is closely connected to power relations and relationality aspects of the Cambodian energy sector, as well as a lack of recognition of different vulnerabilities in energy policies.
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来源期刊
World Development
World Development Multiple-
CiteScore
12.70
自引率
5.80%
发文量
320
期刊介绍: World Development is a multi-disciplinary monthly journal of development studies. It seeks to explore ways of improving standards of living, and the human condition generally, by examining potential solutions to problems such as: poverty, unemployment, malnutrition, disease, lack of shelter, environmental degradation, inadequate scientific and technological resources, trade and payments imbalances, international debt, gender and ethnic discrimination, militarism and civil conflict, and lack of popular participation in economic and political life. Contributions offer constructive ideas and analysis, and highlight the lessons to be learned from the experiences of different nations, societies, and economies.
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