Global climate solutions depend on low-carbon energy transitions in developing countries, but little is known about how those will unfold. Examining the transitions of Brazil and South Africa, Kathryn Hochstetler reveals in her new book, “Political Economies of Energy Transition: Wind and Solar Power in Brazil and South Africa,” how choices about wind and solar power respond to four different constellations of interests and institutions, or four simultaneous political economies of energy transition. The political economy of climate change set Brazil and South Africa on different tracks, with South Africa's coal-based electricity system fighting against an existential threat. Since deforestation dominates Brazil's climate emissions, climate concerns were secondary there for electricity planning. Both saw significant mobilization around industrial policy and cost and consumption issues, showing the importance of economic considerations for electricity choices in emerging economies. Host communities resisted Brazilian wind power, but accepted other forms. Hochstetler argues that national energy transition finally depends on the intersection of these political economies, with South Africa illustrating a politicized transition mode and Brazil presenting a bureaucracy-dominant one.
Author(s): Kathryn Hochstetler
Series: Business and Public Policy
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 295
City: Cambridge
Cover
Political Economies of Energy Transition
1. Political Economies of Energy Transition in Brazil and South Africa
2. Wind and Solar Power in the Transition to a Low-Carbon Economy
3. States, Markets, and Energy Transition: Good Industrial Policy?
4. Electricity Consumption in Brazil and South Africa: Distribution and Prices
5. People and Place: Siting Wind and Solar Plants in Brazil and South Africa
6. Political Economies of Energy Transition
References
Index