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New Report: Taking a Closer Look at the Emerging Issue of Energy Democracy

Gone are the days when people thought little about energy policy — when little more was demanded than reliable access to electricity at affordable prices. Rather, more and more Americans are becoming aware how our energy choices are inextricably intertwined with other shared values. A new report from the Center for Progressive Reform looks at this growing awareness and more through the lens of energy democracy.

What were once questions left for rarefied technocratic elites — how we generate electricity and transport it to end users, who owns and controls vital energy infrastructure, how the costs of production and transmission are shared, and even the processes by which these decisions are made — have gradually acquired “kitchen table” status in many households and become the focus for a growing number of activist movements.

In short, we are seeing a growing interest in and expectation for “energy democracy,” or the notion that energy policy should serve collectively determined goals and that members of the public should exert more control over the energy that powers our society.

Despite its growing prominence as a discrete policy concern, “energy democracy” is an extraordinarily complex concept. We all seem to agree we want more of it. Yet, when applied to actual energy policy debates, agreement over what energy democracy ought to mean in practice, what it offers, and what it demands is elusive. Without a shared understanding of this important concept, we may be at risk of not achieving a satisfactory resolution over such key energy policy questions as permitting reform for energy infrastructure and how best to ensure a just transition for fossil fuel workers and communities.

Today, the Center is releasing Defining Energy Democracy: Claiming Our Equitable Energy Future Through Collective Power, a timely report aimed at helping to make sense of the various dimensions and implications of energy democracy. Its goal is not to resolve competing views over what energy democracy entails, but to clarify tensions, provide a framework for productive discussion of these matters, and ultimately foster collective decision-making in the context of live policy debates, now and in the future.

What makes this report particularly valuable is its unique origin. In September 2022, the Center hosted a first-of-its-kind roundtable discussion that brought together a diverse array of energy policy experts to discuss and consider the full dimensions of energy democracy and its role in advancing U.S. energy policy. What emerged from that discussion — and what this report attempts to capture — was a coherent framework for making sense of energy democracy.

The roundtable was conducted under the Chatham House Rule to permit full and frank discussion; given that, we can’t disclose participants — but we are grateful for their contributions to this report.

In the years ahead, Center staff and Member Scholars will apply this framework to pressing energy policy questions. And I hope that it will provide an invaluable resource for policymakers, the press, advocates, and interested members of the public who are looking to do the same.

I also hope that a greater understanding of, and appreciation for, the complexities of energy democracy will enable our country to pursue more effective, people-centered energy policy.

The growing public attention to energy democracy comes at an alarming time in our nation’s history. The last several decades have seen a coordinated campaign by conservative lawmakers at the state and federal level and conservative judges throughout the federal judiciary targeted at undermining the foundations of our democratic institutions. Personally, I am heartened by this embrace of energy democracy since it provides a noteworthy counter to the broader trend of democratic backsliding we are now witnessing. Energy democracy holds some promise to help, if only in a small way, arrest and reverse this alarming trend.

After all, energy democracy envisions ongoing collaboration between people and their government to address the existential crisis of climate change and other energy-related policy challenges; as such, it offers an invaluable model for rebuilding our faith in — and a sense of connectedness to — our governing institutions, both of which are essential if they are to function effectively.

To learn more, read our report, subscribe to our email list, and follow us on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram.

Showing 2,822 results

wind turbines on a grassy plain

James Goodwin | May 24, 2023

New Report: Taking a Closer Look at the Emerging Issue of Energy Democracy

Gone are the days when people thought little about energy policy — when little more was demanded than reliable access to electricity at affordable prices. Rather, more and more Americans are becoming aware how our energy choices are inextricably intertwined with other shared values. A new report from the Center for Progressive Reform looks at this growing awareness and more through the lens of energy democracy.

air pollution

Daniel Farber | May 23, 2023

The Biden Power Plant Rule and the Major Questions Doctrine

We’ve already started to hear claims that the Biden power plant rule falls under the major questions doctrine, which the U.S. Supreme Court used to strike down former President Obama’s Clean Power Plan. Are those claims plausible?

Daniel Farber | May 15, 2023

Taming the Dormant Commerce Clause

Although the U.S. Constitution does not say so directly, the U.S. Supreme Court has said there are implied limits on state regulations that interfere with interstate commerce. This is known as the dormant commerce clause doctrine. State clean energy laws have been bedeviled by challenges based on this doctrine. The Supreme Court has just made it easier for states to fend off those claims.

Thomas McGarity | May 12, 2023

Another Step Toward Judicial Supremacy

The U.S. Supreme Court last week agreed to decide a case that could bring on a major weakening of the laws that the United States Congress has put into place to protect public health, safety, and the environment. The Chevron doctrine, as it's known, has never been popular with the regulated industries and conservative think tanks that want to limit the power of federal agencies.

Wetlands Landscape

Minor Sinclair | May 11, 2023

In Upcoming Fishing Case, High Court Could Reel in Entire Administrative State

On May 1, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a case on whether the U.S. Department of Commerce has the authority to require fishermen to allow inspectors on board. At stake is the ability of agencies to write regulations that reasonably interpret laws even when they are ambiguous.   

Marcha Chaudry | May 1, 2023

What the Legacy of PCBs Means for Efforts to Protect Virginia’s James River from Toxic Contamination

Earlier this year, the Richmond Times Dispatch reported that Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) scientists are working to reduce the daily flow of cancer-causing PCBs into the James River and keep the commonwealth's water clean and safe to drink.

Allison Stevens | April 27, 2023

In Memoriam: Bill Rodgers Embodied a Spirit of Caring and Generosity while Leading the Environmental Law Movement

The Center for Progressive Reform is saddened to share the news that long-time Member Scholar William H. “Bill” Rodgers, Jr. passed away this month.

Minor Sinclair | April 26, 2023

Welcoming Five Prominent Academics to the Center for Progressive Reform

Six years ago, Smithsonian Magazine was among those decrying the death of public intellectuals (“the egghead is dead”). Where are today’s Ralph Waldo Emersons or James Baldwins or Susan Sontags, they mourned. The article went on to offer a fascinating insight. History shows that “public intellectuals always emerged when the country was sharply divided: during the Civil War, the Vietnam War, the fights for civil rights and women’s rights.” In this moment of ever-deepening divide, it gives me great pleasure to announce that the Center for Progressive Reform welcomes five prominent academics to our network. The toll for the death of expertise may have been premature; long live public intellectuals!

Allison Stevens | April 25, 2023

Scholars Kick Off 2023 Advocating for Clean Water, Climate Resilience, and More

Testifying before Congress, releasing new books, engaging with the news media — our Member Scholars packed virtually a year’s worth of advocacy on climate justice, clean air and water, and worker health and safety into the first three months of 2023.