The energy ‘crisis’ in Switzerland during the winter of 2022–23 highlighted the need to integrate the idea of sufficiency into previously efficiency-focused discourses and policies. A mixed-methods approach was used to explore emerging sufficiency practices and energy justice. Qualitative interviews (n = 28) with a diverse range of households and building management companies (‘régies’) in Geneva, as well as a quantitative online survey, were undertaken in 2023. It was found that different measures and recommendations did lead to efforts to reduce energy consumption, but also revealed flaws as practices typically lacked an energy justice perspective. Important discrepancies occurred between low- and high-income groups, tenants and owners, inhabitants of houses and apartments.
Context and quantification
About the policy
Area
Justice, Climate Action
Instrument
Policy advice, Incentives
Intervention
Energy Justice
Cost
None
Funding
None
Institutional arrangement
None
Impacts
Stakeholders involved
Housing authorities
Stakeholders impacted
Vulnerable groups
Wellbeing
Life Satisfaction, Safety
Justice consideration
Recognitional
Metadata
Lead author name | Alice Guilbert |
---|---|
Lead author gender | Female |
Lead author institution | University of Geneva |
Lead author institution location | Switzerland |
Peer reviewed? | true |
Grey literature? | false |
Type of paper | Research article |
Volume | 5 |
Publication year | 2024 |
URL / DOI | doi:10.5334/bc.458 |
Sufficiency mentioned? | true |