What is the proportion of energy poverty in India?
This was the big question that was asked multiple times across the summer school. It is a nebulous term since there is no one unified definition of energy poverty and more so one that is contextualised to a country like India. It is understood that the definition will have multiple layers and dimensions to it. What there are, is yet to materialise collectively.
Poverty is increasingly understood as the deprivation of opportunities for living a dignified and good life (Bhide & Monroy, 2011). What a dignified and good life is a whole other debate, which also arose multiple times during the summer school. In this sense, “energy poverty is defined as the level of energy consumption among households living below the poverty line (BPL)” (Foster, Tre, & Wodon, 2000)
Does this mean then that households and communities that are economically poor are also energy poor?
Mega-projects for social justice?
Case of Pavagada, Karnataka, India
The global energy transition from fossil to renewable energy is gaining momentum and coming to scale. The scaling is largely driven by mega projects: large scale and complex undertakings (ReSET Team). The Pavagada Solar Park, operational since 2019, is at this very moment, the third largest solar park in the world covering around 53 square kilometres. It is working at the capacity of producing 2050 MW of energy and an additional 300MW is in the pipelines, to be operationalised by 2026.
The interesting model here is that the farmers in the Taluk have not sold their land, they have given it on a 28 year lease to the Karnataka Solar Power Development Cooperation Limited (KSPDCL) for an annual revenue of Rs. 21,000 per acre which will increase by 5% biannually.
In 2023, journalists Pragathi and Flavia wrote an incisive piece funded by the Pulitzer centre on what this means for justice in the energy transitions for the villages in Pavagada and the renewable energy goals in India. The illustrations used here were made by me to support their reportage.


The residents of Pavagada and lessors of the land do not get their electricity from this solar plant. The energy is fed into the grid that goes to the cities. How can we start thinking about a socially just way of developing a mega project such as this? There are social, economic, technological, political, ecological and financial implications when imagining any mega project, but what possible energy futures can we imagine for the Pavagada Taluk?

We presented some realistic visions and some radical visions and all in between. This connected to the earlier thoughts on
how can we radicalise energy politics and also situate it temporally?
Community is a social construct and it isn’t a homogeneous group that exists out there. A community is built and community building can be facilitated in cases such as Pavagada. The crux of it is to identify a common vision for people to collectivise. At the heart of it, each individual landowner and worker have competing sets of values, but the unseen commonalities have to be revealed. For example, the valuation of the land is made based on what the productivity of it was. For a moment, let’s comprehend how much money it would mean if the valuation of the land is made based on what the productivity of the land is considering it is providing 2050 MW of energy to cities. It is crucial to expose contradictions between values just as it is to reveal mutual benefits. People will always collectivise around wanting to know more, around being curious at what could be as opposed to what is. Can we embed rights for the land, like the river in New Zealand became entitled to rights, like an individual is.
To the lands degraded,
by the promise
and potential of the sun,
I see you.
To the plants,
in the dark,
under the panel that powers my house,
I feel you.
To the energy,
that flows into grids,
and guides political narratives
I hear you.
Loudly.
In the lines outside my window,
where birds refuse to sit.
Read part 1 of my insights from the summer school here.
Organising team:
Megan Davies, Centre for Sustainability Transitions, Stellenbosch University
Mark Swilling, Centre for Sustainability Transitions, Stellenbosch University
Philipp Späth, ALU, Freiburg
Mithlesh Verma, Indian Institute for Human Settlements
Stuti Haldar, Indian Institute for Human Settlements
Amir Bazaz, Indian Institute for Human Settlements
Aromar Revi, Indian Institute for Human Settlements
Jesse Hoffman, Urban Futures Studio, Utrecht University
Maarten Hajer, Urban Futures Studio, Utrecht University
Cohort:
Sukanya Khar
Thandeka Tshabalala
Sneha Swami
Sobhagya Mittal
Rudeena Jabar
Rohit Patwardhan
Priyank Jain
Pranusha Kulkarni
Kevin Foster
Azam Danish

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