Energy Literacy for Decentralised Governance

Lead Research Organisation: Loughborough University
Department Name: Geography

Abstract

Over the last ten years African governments have moved increasingly towards decentralised budgets, giving local authorities increased powers and budgets to govern areas that include both rural and urban population. Yet while cities have a municipal authority to consider new ways of supplying energy to its urban citizens, those governing Africa's rural poor in small and medium towns in the surrounding rural hinterlands have rarely considered energy infrastructure.
Existing research indicates that many local authorities in Africa are struggling as they do not have the capacities and capabilities necessary to govern the complex social, political and economic situations they routinely face. Required to contribute inter alia to financial management, local and regional economic development, strategic planning in the local government, budgeting procedures, tax collection, procurement procedures and standards, ethics for local government staff and elected representatives, and action against corruption, it is hardly surprising that against this backdrop the demands placed on their time and capabilities would see energy planning neglected. And yet energy - in particular, clean energy for development - is becoming increasingly important not just to them in their specific geographical location, but to the wider region and world more generally.
Local authority capacity across Africa therefore poses a fundamental challenge for successfully implementing clean energy for development programmes. In short, decentralisation could open the way for local authorities to become champions and drivers towards cleaner energy, but at the same time, their lack of capacity and capabilities is currently proving a major barrier to implementing clean energy development in African states. For sure, improving the understanding and evidence base of both the opportunities and challenges associated with implementing clean energy for development in Africa and it is this lacuna which this proposed research seeks to address.
To achieve this, the project has a number of foci. First, the project sets out to scope the size of the problem. There is an urgent need to document the roles and responsibilities of local authorities in African states to work out how these new roles impact the capacity and capabilities of local authorities (in different contexts) have been affected by the transfer of powers and budgets under decentralization initiatives. When a hospital needs a new generator, who decides? When the local market needs new lighting, who decides? Who has the power and budget to spend on energy?
Second, and having determined who typically holds the power and budgets, we will then explore their 'energy literacy'. Among all the other capacities and capabilities they must have to govern, our central question is do they have basic energy literacy? We take an energy-literate person is to be someone who: can trace energy flows and think in terms of energy systems; knows how much energy he or she uses, for what, and where that energy comes from; can assess the credibility of information about energy; can communicate about energy and energy use in meaningful ways; is able to make informed energy and energy use decisions based on an understanding of impacts and consequences. Put simply, there is an urgent need to ascertain whether decision makers have enough knowledge about energy to make positive decisions towards cleaner energy sources, and wider energy access for their citizens.
Here we will focus on local authorities in Rwanda and Kenya. The importance we attached to these two cases is guided by recognition that Rwandan local authorities have been budget holders for a number of years - therefore we expect them to be able to share their experiences of the challenge of running a district - whereas in Kenya, they are about to have elections that will give more power and budget to the local authorities, so they will be able to share both their hopes and expectations

Planned Impact

Ultimately, our goal is that this research will (i) raise the profile of local government roles within clean energy transitions in rural Africa amongst key national and international stakeholders, (ii) raise the profile of energy issues amongst local authorities themselves and (iii) help increase the capacity of those local authorities to play a facilitative role within clean energy transitions across their territories.
We believe that the impact of this will in the long term lead to increased adoption of clean energy services among Africa's poor, which in turn will benefit communities by strengthening livelihoods, encouraging economic growth, improving health and protecting the environment. To this end, our simplified theory of change is captured in our key research questions. We will first seek to identify the roles and responsibilities of local authorities in relation to energy issues across Rural Africa. Once the frame of the research is established this will lead to an analysis of whether this role has already been affected by the transfer of powers and budgets under decentralization initiatives. The analysis leads us to hypothesise, with evidence, the implications of further more profound transformations under current decentralization impulses, and to determine whether action on the level of awareness of local authorities in terms of energy literacy will be likely to affect the outcomes of longer-term planning for the increased uptake of clean energy technologies within this context? If, as we predict, the research leads to the conclusion that such action in enhancing the energy literacy of local authorities will have substantial positive implications on clean energy transitions, then our research will have formed the basis and provided evidence for a more substantial intervention by governments, donors or civil society, to strengthen the energy literacy of local authorities.

We will work hard in interacting with the key relevant stakeholders within the two target countries and beyond in ensuring that the evidence distilled through this research will help convince policy-makers and donors of the crucial need to invest in enhancing the energy literacy of local authorities and improving their capacity to play a strong facilitative role within clean energy transitions. The key stakeholder groups are policy actors in and beyond the specific countries of study and the market actors in the specific countries of study. Policy actors includes both donors and other agencies that design or implement energy related interventions, as well as national and local government agencies that manage the policy environment. National authorities include those responsible for building the capacity of local authorities and may not be directly related to energy planning. For instance, the Uganda Ministry of Local Government would be a prime stakeholder, as would the equivalent Ministry of Local Government in Kenya. The market actors include both the formal and informal private sectors including the utilities, emerging Energy Supply Companies and civil society organizations involved in energy-related projects.

Within the study areas, key informants from local authorities will contribute data while at the same time have their awareness of the issues enhanced by the questioning process. At a National level we expect that the feedback of our findings will enable some specific actors to enhance or redirect their interventions, possibly to engage local authorities or to begin programmes of awareness building. The workshops will be convened by Practical Action who have convening power within the chosen countries. Beyond the specific workshops we will use opportunities to present our findings at relevant national, regional, and international conferences convened by others. The findings of the research will be documented in a series of guidelines or policy notes tailored to the different audiences.
 
Description The first year of the project revolved around the completion of background literature reviews and working papers, stakeholder mapping, developing the project website, preparing for and running the two country workshops and writing up materials from the workshops and preparing materials for dissemination. The second year and beyond have focused on the delivery of the country workshops and detailed exploration of the two country contexts via interviews and the review of secondary material (as well as a further policy workshop in Kenya), the identification of follow-up initiatives and the preparation of dissemination materials.. The project formally ended at the beginning of October 2015. Project findings revolved around assessing the major energy governance challenges facing local authorities, the need to accompany devolutuion of powers with devolution of budgets and capacity building/training, the lack of resources to support decentralised delivery in Rwanda and the poor capacity of county governments in Kenya to meet the new responsibilities for energy planning bestowed upon them. Above all, the outcomes of decentralization will always be heavily influenced by the nature of local, national and global questions of politrical economy.
Perhaps the main lesson learnt over the period since the last annual report is that it takes time to secure policy buy-in and impact and even small sums of follow-on resources can be really important in pursuing and securing those impacts. Small additional amounts of money have been crucial in allowing us to both pursue further activities in Kenya but also to embark upon connected activity in Malawi as described elsewhere in the report.
Exploitation Route This project involves exploring the scope of what was an under-investigated issue (the implications of political decentralization for energy governance) - its eventual impact will depend upon the degree to which we have been able to raise the profile of these issues amongst key stakeholders as a major factor affecting the success of clean energy interventions. The level of success of our efforts will be measured via: evidence of profile raising of these issues across a variety of international fora; evidence of addressing of these issues within other publications/documentation; achievement of follow-up projects etc.
It is difficult, however to measure this in terms of ultimate beneficiaries. For example, if our scoping of the issues results in improved energy governance amongst Kenyan county authorities this has the potential to significantly enhance access of Kenyan citizens to clean energy resources, it is extremely difficult, however, to make claims for direct impact upon those beneficiaries or to calculate specific numbers.. In the Case for Support we explained that this project involves the scoping of a potentially major but so far under-documented problem (the lack of attention being paid to the role of local government within energy transitions and the implications of political decentralization within that context). As explained there, "in bringing together the literature and documenting the problem we hope to generate multiple outputs that may influence policy formation (although we acknowledge that within the timeframe of the project this will 'influence the policy debate' rather than actual policy formation). .Through this documentation of the problem we will strongly encourage others to follow up with interventions - such as training and capacity building in energy literacy."

Within the specific context of Kenya, Practical Action have been able to draw upon the work conducted for READ in (a) raising the profile of county government roles in energy governance in other funded work on the new energy bill in Kenya and (b) promoting the importance of local level governance to the successful outcome of the Kenyan SE4All strategy. The work conducted for READ has also had a direct influence upon the evolution of the SONG project in Kenya where we encouraged INTASAVE to develop a strong relationship with the county authorities in determining the development of the nano-grids project beyond its original USES phase (something that we are now doing with our new local partners (SCODE) following the collapse of INTASAVE as documented in this year's annual report for the SONG project). Finally, we are talking to other organizations working in the Kenyan energy sector (with whom, for example, we have already run joint events specifically addressing local energy governance) about other potential avenues for funding further capacity enhancing work amongst Kenyan county governments (our Kenyan partner, Tameezan wa Gathui has, for example, been involved in developing a training programme for women in solar energy which has involved some county level employees). In 2017 we successfully secured EPSRC impact enhancement funding and have been working with Community Energy Malawi, Mzuzu University and Strathclyde University on a project blueprinting District Energy officers in Malawi.
The project formally closed over a year ago now but we have continued to work on taking forward the work initiated via the project in a number of different directions. There is no numerical target here (there were no specific targets established in our case for support), however we are clear that the success of READ will ultimately depend upon our ability to get questions of political decentralization and enhancing local governance onto the agenda of major stakeholders nationally and internationally across the clean energy sector. To that end we have taken the following steps to ensure that the work started by READ is taken up and taken forward in a number of different directions.
(a) We have appointed a three year PhD student (jointly funded by Loughborough and the EPSRC) who is directly working with partners in Kenya to take forward some of the lessons from the READ project in improving local energy governance (particularly in relation to the Energy/Water/Food nexus);
(b) Before INTASAVE went into liquidation, they had agreed to fund a research development post designed to secure further research funding for collaborations around local energy governance initiatives. Unfortunately this initiative was ended following the demise
(c) We (Loughborough and GAMOS) together with our partners from the University of Surrey involved in another USES project made a successful bid (£300,000) to Innovate's Energy Catalyst programme to further explore ideas on the development of solar electric cooking. Part of this is linked specifically to the potential role of local governments in promoting these kinds of solutions in different contexts. The project began in May 2017.
(d) We have been awarded £20,000 of EPSRC GCRF funding to integrate lessons learnt from READ into a major initiative funded by the Scottish government designed to blueprint district enegy officer positions in Malawi as part of the Malawian government's commitments to energy decentralization. This is a project delivered in partnership with Community Energy Malawi, Mzuzu University and the University of Strathclyde.
(e) We have partnered with a range of actors in Kenya within an effort to promotebcounty level capacity buiulding. This involves running training sessions with county officials; establishing a virtual local energy governance research hub; conducting a review of the local governance components of the recently announced Kenyan SE4All strategy etc. The partnership involves Loughborough, other UK universities, the Africa Sustainability Hub, NETFUND, WWF, CARITAS Kenya, Practical Action East Africa and CAFOD.
Sectors Energy,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice

URL http://thereadproject.co.uk
 
Description We are feeding into the design of a series of capacity building activities in Kenya which have fed into the establishment on a new county energy capacity building platform which we are collaborating in the development of with a number of partner organizations. We have also collaborated in the development of a blueprint for district energy policy for the Malawi government. We are currently carrying out a €3.5 million programme of Energy sector capacity buiilding with colleagues from IED, ACTS, IIED and Practical Action, which is also involving collaboration with other current projects being led by Loughborough University, e.g. Climate Compatible Growth (FCDO-funded).
First Year Of Impact 2015
Sector Energy,Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Policy & public services

 
Description District Energy Policy
Geographic Reach Africa 
Policy Influence Type Contribution to a national consultation/review
 
Description EPSRC Impact Enhancement Fund
Amount £5,000 (GBP)
Funding ID j15608 
Organisation Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 06/2016 
End 03/2017
 
Description EPSRC Institutional Sponsorship
Amount £19,387 (GBP)
Organisation Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2016 
End 03/2017
 
Description EPSRC/Loughborough Studentship
Amount £80,000 (GBP)
Organisation Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2015 
End 09/2018
 
Description EU-funded Energy Planning Capacity Building Programme for the Kenyan Ministry of Energy
Amount € 3,500,000 (EUR)
Organisation European Commission 
Sector Public
Country European Union (EU)
Start 11/2020 
 
Description DFID TEA Partnership with ACTS 
Organisation African Centre for Technology Studies
Country Kenya 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution This is a partnership which we have developed to help build the capacity of local energy governance in Kenya and East Africa. The partnership brings together the LCEDN with ACTS as representative of the Africa Sustainability Hub. Other partners include CARITAS Kenya, CAFOD, NETFUND and WWF. We are supporting a series of capacity building workshops.
Collaborator Contribution This is a partnership which we have developed to help build the capacity of local energy governance in Kenya and East Africa. The partnership brings together the LCEDN with ACTS as representative of the Africa Sustainability Hub. Other partners include CARITAS Kenya, CAFOD, NETFUND and WWF. We are supporting a series of capacity building workshops.
Impact Under development
Start Year 2016
 
Description DFID TEA Partnership with Practical Action 
Organisation Practical Action
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution This is part of a new partnership funded by DFID which has built on the research conducted under READ to explore relations between researchers and stakeholders within the arena of local energy governance.
Collaborator Contribution This has been a partnership with Practical Action in Kenya and Bangladesh
Impact East African report under development
Start Year 2016
 
Description INTASAVE Research Partnership 
Organisation INTASAVE
Country China 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Joint management of Bid-Writer to develop future research initiatives connected to both the READ and SONG projects
Collaborator Contribution INTASAVE and Loughborough are currently cooperating on the SONG (Solar Nano-Grids) project. This partnership does not refer to that role which is already covered via the partnership that is an integral part of that project. This partnership reflects a commitment made by INTASAVE to fund a bid-writing position to work collaboratively on grant proposals to take forward further research initiatives related to both the READ and SONG projects. We have already advertised the position twice but are yet to fill the vacancy.
Impact The funding of the post has been confirmed by INTASAVE and the post has been advertised.
Start Year 2014
 
Description Malawi District Energy Governance 
Organisation Community Energy Malawi
Country Malawi 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Drawing upon the lessons from our READ work in Kenya and Rwanda, this project is a collaboration with colleagues in the University of Strathclyde (UoS), Mzuzu University (MZUNI) and Community Energy Malawi (CEM) alongside a Scottish Government-funded project that is already working with the Malawian government entitled 'Community Energy Malawi Action Plan 2016-2017.' This is the latest stage of a £2.5 million cooperation project between the governments of Scotland and Malawi that has been implemented over the past few years to support the uptake of renewable energy in Malawi. The 2016-17 Action Plan implicitly recognizes the importance of the current political decentralization process in Malawi to the pursuit of renewable energy in the country, our project involves working with our partners in exploring the implications of these changes in governance arrangements much more directly and profoundly. We will draw upon the detailed work that we have done on local energy governance at a global level and with local authorities in Kenya and Rwanda and our experiences working with local governments in the development of our nano-grids project in Kenya and Bangladesh (the SONG project) to work with our Malawian and Scottish colleagues in determining the key issues surrounding the implications of political decentralization for local energy governance in Malawi and developing a national policy framework for local energy governance within that context that will feed into Malawi's national strategy for SE4All and the implementation of the new National Energy Policy .
Collaborator Contribution Community Energy Malawi are carrying out interviews and focus groups and key stakeholders and have also organized the main workshop event in Malawi in March 2017. Mzuzu University have provided expert knowledge and information on the Malawian context. The University of Strathclyde have connected this initiative into their wider project on energy planning in Malawi funded by the Scottish government.
Impact 1. Review of current literature on local energy governance and political decentralization in Malawi in the context of lessons identified from the READ project in Kenya and Rwanda. 2. Design and execution of a research programme exploring the key issues surrounding local energy governance in Malawi via an exploration of the views of key energy sector stakeholders (interviews, focus groups etc.) 3. Authoring of Policy Briefing for Malawian government (and international funding agencies) 4. Launch of the Policy Brief at a High-Level workshop (incorporating involvement of UK partners)
Start Year 2016
 
Description Malawi District Energy Governance 
Organisation Mzuzu University
Country Malawi 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Drawing upon the lessons from our READ work in Kenya and Rwanda, this project is a collaboration with colleagues in the University of Strathclyde (UoS), Mzuzu University (MZUNI) and Community Energy Malawi (CEM) alongside a Scottish Government-funded project that is already working with the Malawian government entitled 'Community Energy Malawi Action Plan 2016-2017.' This is the latest stage of a £2.5 million cooperation project between the governments of Scotland and Malawi that has been implemented over the past few years to support the uptake of renewable energy in Malawi. The 2016-17 Action Plan implicitly recognizes the importance of the current political decentralization process in Malawi to the pursuit of renewable energy in the country, our project involves working with our partners in exploring the implications of these changes in governance arrangements much more directly and profoundly. We will draw upon the detailed work that we have done on local energy governance at a global level and with local authorities in Kenya and Rwanda and our experiences working with local governments in the development of our nano-grids project in Kenya and Bangladesh (the SONG project) to work with our Malawian and Scottish colleagues in determining the key issues surrounding the implications of political decentralization for local energy governance in Malawi and developing a national policy framework for local energy governance within that context that will feed into Malawi's national strategy for SE4All and the implementation of the new National Energy Policy .
Collaborator Contribution Community Energy Malawi are carrying out interviews and focus groups and key stakeholders and have also organized the main workshop event in Malawi in March 2017. Mzuzu University have provided expert knowledge and information on the Malawian context. The University of Strathclyde have connected this initiative into their wider project on energy planning in Malawi funded by the Scottish government.
Impact 1. Review of current literature on local energy governance and political decentralization in Malawi in the context of lessons identified from the READ project in Kenya and Rwanda. 2. Design and execution of a research programme exploring the key issues surrounding local energy governance in Malawi via an exploration of the views of key energy sector stakeholders (interviews, focus groups etc.) 3. Authoring of Policy Briefing for Malawian government (and international funding agencies) 4. Launch of the Policy Brief at a High-Level workshop (incorporating involvement of UK partners)
Start Year 2016
 
Description Malawi District Energy Governance 
Organisation University of Strathclyde
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Drawing upon the lessons from our READ work in Kenya and Rwanda, this project is a collaboration with colleagues in the University of Strathclyde (UoS), Mzuzu University (MZUNI) and Community Energy Malawi (CEM) alongside a Scottish Government-funded project that is already working with the Malawian government entitled 'Community Energy Malawi Action Plan 2016-2017.' This is the latest stage of a £2.5 million cooperation project between the governments of Scotland and Malawi that has been implemented over the past few years to support the uptake of renewable energy in Malawi. The 2016-17 Action Plan implicitly recognizes the importance of the current political decentralization process in Malawi to the pursuit of renewable energy in the country, our project involves working with our partners in exploring the implications of these changes in governance arrangements much more directly and profoundly. We will draw upon the detailed work that we have done on local energy governance at a global level and with local authorities in Kenya and Rwanda and our experiences working with local governments in the development of our nano-grids project in Kenya and Bangladesh (the SONG project) to work with our Malawian and Scottish colleagues in determining the key issues surrounding the implications of political decentralization for local energy governance in Malawi and developing a national policy framework for local energy governance within that context that will feed into Malawi's national strategy for SE4All and the implementation of the new National Energy Policy .
Collaborator Contribution Community Energy Malawi are carrying out interviews and focus groups and key stakeholders and have also organized the main workshop event in Malawi in March 2017. Mzuzu University have provided expert knowledge and information on the Malawian context. The University of Strathclyde have connected this initiative into their wider project on energy planning in Malawi funded by the Scottish government.
Impact 1. Review of current literature on local energy governance and political decentralization in Malawi in the context of lessons identified from the READ project in Kenya and Rwanda. 2. Design and execution of a research programme exploring the key issues surrounding local energy governance in Malawi via an exploration of the views of key energy sector stakeholders (interviews, focus groups etc.) 3. Authoring of Policy Briefing for Malawian government (and international funding agencies) 4. Launch of the Policy Brief at a High-Level workshop (incorporating involvement of UK partners)
Start Year 2016
 
Description SEI Collaboration on Kenyan Decentralization 
Organisation Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)
Country Sweden 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We jointly organised a high-level meeting about the implications of decentralization for energy governance in Kenya. We provided speakers, advertising and hosted the presentations on our project website.
Collaborator Contribution SEI provided presentations, venue hire and catering, did all of the event administration etc. We are still actively discussing further collaboration in this area.
Impact High-Level workshop in March 2015
Start Year 2014
 
Description 4th LCEDN Conference Durham 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact We held a special USES section at the 4th LCEDN conference held in Durham during March 2015 during which we presented updates on both the READ and SONG projects as well as encouraging discussion across the project teams as well. There were a wide range of participants drawn from an array of academic disciplines as well as representatives from DFID, international partners and the Private sector.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://lcedn.com/community/conference-series/community-conference-series-lcedn-4th-conference/
 
Description Annual Association of American Geographers Session 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Members of the READ project team organised and ran a session at the 2015 AAG reflecting on the relationship between political decentralisation and decentralsised energy drawing on the lessons learned from the READ project. The session attracted a wide range of presentations reflecting on the issues in a variety of locations, and brought together a number of the other USES projects.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL https://www.facebook.com/AAGeesg/posts/528764213920878
 
Description Governance Energy and Gender Webinar 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact We conducted a webinar as part of our ongoing series with Smart Villages that focused on the theme of energy governance and gender. Two of the USES projects (READ and SAMSET) presented alongside two of the five teams funded in DFID's Energy and gender research programme which is administered by Energia. There was a lot of interest in the presentations and we responded to several follow up enquiries. In addition, we have taken forward a formal collaboration with Energia as part of our new DFID funded programme of activity.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
URL http://e4sv.org/events/addressing-energy-governance-questions-scale-scope/
 
Description Kenyan Workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact The workshop brought together a range of actors involved in the energy sector in Nakuru county in Kenya in order: (1) To
identify the local governance of energy issues in Kenya generally and Nakuru specifically (2) To identify the nature of decentralization processes in Kenya and their actual and potential impacts on a range of different issues relating to energy (3) To assess the levels of understanding about decentralised energy amongst key stakeholders (4) To map key stakeholders and (5) To work together with
stakeholders to identify key issues and suggest ways in which to move forward.
Through a mixture of presentations, discussions and stakeholder mapping exercises, the workshop encouraged a wide range of discussion about how best to address energy access issues through the new county structures in Kenya.
Key themes addressed included: (a) the poor state of energy access in the county with large proportions lacking access to electricity and efficient technologies for cooking and heating; (b) the fact that here is lack of clear understanding of the roles, responsibilities and authority of
key stakeholders including county government following recent changes in Kenya to a new decentralised political system. (c) the lack of county government control over large scale energy generation in the county (e.g. geothermal); (d) the socio-cultural issues associated with some energy technologies (e.g. energy production from human waste); (e) lack of capacity and standards/quality control and high
installation costs of biogas systems; high costs of equipment, lack of quality control and lack of awareness about
the potential of solar energy; lack of awareness, limited distribution and lack of quality control in the Improved Cook Stove
(ICS) sector are some of the key constraints that affect energy access in the county. (f) Despite the above constraints,
national energy policies and implementation plans indicate political will towards decentralization of authority,
resources and capacities as well as increasing effort towards increasing energy access through decentralised energy
options.

On the way forward stakeholders agreed on the need for the following actions they would take forward, some of which
could be the basis for future READ intervention which is being planned:
(i) Create awareness amongst and build the capacity on decentralized energy access at the county level, share information and replicate similar workshops, assess knowledge, identify challenges and develop sustainable technologies;
(ii) Collaborate with the Nakuru county government to expand the briquetting sector for improved livelihoods of low income communities;
(iii) Lobby the UK government to provide energy awareness training in Kenya;
(iv) On technology development stakeholders will focus on learning more about geothermal production; up-scaling biogas;
(v) joint fund-raising; creating dialogue and county level collaboration on green energy;
(vi) liaising with National and County governments on Renewable energy issues, decentralization and capacity building; developing RE training material; influencing County government on renewable energy laws / policies; compiling / sharing RE case studies, among other strategies.

Contacts made during this workshop have resulted in discussions over the development of further small-scale solar projects in the county, they have also been fed into Practical Action's advocacy work around the National Energy Bill and the development of SE4All activities.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL http://thereadproject.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/READ-Stakeholders-Workshop-Report-_Kenya_Fina...
 
Description Keynote ICDRET Dhaka Jan 2016 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact The PI of the READ project was the keynote speaker at the 4th International Conference on Developments in Renewable Energy Technologies where he focused on a series of lessons drawn from the READ work, relating also to the experiences of SONG in Kenya and Bangladesh. The visit coincided with SONG project meetings and an opportunity to discuss potential future collaborations taking forward both projects. The presentation also involved introduction of and discussion of the projects funded under the USES programme and the activities of the USES Network
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
URL http://www.icdret.uiu.ac.bd/index.php/user/programSchedule
 
Description Malawi District Energy Workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact The workshop was designed to explore the design and dynamics of a proposed new Malawi government policy on the creation of District Energy officers (DEOs). Members of the Loughborough READ team made presentations on (i) general debates over political decentralization and decentralized energy and (ii) experiences with energy sector devolution in kenya and participated in discussions over the best strategy for developing DEOs in Malawi.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description Midlands Energy Consortium December 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Our new PhD student working on taking forward READ and SONG-related research made a presentation entitled 'Decentralised energy and political decentralization in Kenya' developing ideas for the next steps of his research at the annual MEC student conference.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description Powergen Cape Town 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact One of the READ team members presented key lessons from the READ project at the Powergen industry conference in Cape Town, South Africa in July 2015. The event brings together ministerial and government officials, academics, executives and professionals from government utilities and municipalities and private enterprise from sub-Saharan Africa and around the world to exchange views, discuss experiences and learn new ways to expand and strengthen the power industry across the many countries of Africa.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://s36.a2zinc.net/clients/pennwell/pgafrica2015/Public/SpeakerDetails.aspx?FromPage=SpeakerList....
 
Description Practical Action National Energy Bill Event 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Our project partners Practical Action organised a major high-level workshop event in Naivasha, Kenya during February 2015. One of the READ team attended and presented on the READ project and the event was preceded by engagement across a range of Kenyan counties the responses from which were fed directly into the discussions with the intention of promoting the importance of local energy governance. This engagement has continued within ongoing discussions with a range of partners over the Kenyan national SE4All plan.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description READ App 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact We have produced an APP version of the commissioned youtube videos from the READ youtube channel
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015,2016
URL https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.appmakr.thereadproject5&hl=en
 
Description READ Youtube Videos 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact We launched a dedicated youtube channel for advertising the activities of the project - the most important part of this was the authoring of a series of short bespoke videos aimed at promoting the role of local government in energy transitions. The channel also includes extracts from workshops and other project activities. As of March 2016 there had been nearly 700 views of this material.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014,2015,2016
URL https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCd8WPaCUURX8yzpWjNvKPBQ
 
Description READ/SEI County Energy Planning Workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Half-Day Expert Meeting on County Energy Planning in Kenya: Local Participation and Local Solutions which took place on Monday 16th March 2015 at the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), UN Avenue, Gigiri, Nairobi which was organized in collaboration with colleagues in the Stockholm Environment Institute and Practical Action.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description RGS 2016 Presentation: Governing decentralised energy provision: exploring the role of local governance in articulating nexus approaches to energy transitions in Kenya 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Governing decentralised energy provision: exploring the role of local governance in articulating nexus approaches to energy transitions in Kenya
Richard Sieff (Loughborough University, UK)
Ed Brown (Loughborough University, UK)
John Harrison (Loughborough University, UK)
Jonathan Cloke (Loughborough University, UK)
Nexus thinking, increasingly advocated as an integrative approach to building synergies and reducing trade-offs across the water, food and energy sectors (e.g. Hoff, 2011), has coincided with a period of dramatic transformations in the political and energy contexts of the Global South. Widespread political decentralisation has taken place, while the issue of energy access and decentralised energy as a potential solution has risen in prominence. These changes prompt the question of what role decentralised governance structures could take in realising nexus approaches to decentralised energy transitions, yet existing literature in this field has been critiqued for a lack of attention to the crucial part played by local governance and changing national-local political relationships (Stevens & Gallagher, 2015). This is of particular surprise given the extensive nature of many current political decentralisation drives in developing countries. This paper aims to bridge the gap between the literatures on political decentralisation and nexus approaches to decentralised energy, which have hitherto largely been discussed as separate entities. Focussing predominantly on Kenya, site of one of "the most rapid and ambitious devolution processes in the world" (World Bank, 2015), it attempts to better understand the role of local governance in implementing a more harmonised nexus and how political decentralisation might facilitate and enhance this process. A range of issues within this context will be explored: How the various scales of governance interact within the energy, water and food sectors and how they might be most effectively coordinated; How can institutional disconnect, power imbalances and the increasing complexity of greater cross-sector integration be resolved?; How energy governance might be enhanced by greater powers for local authorities
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description RGS 2016 Presentation: Reshaping Energy Governance 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact This was a presentation pulling together insights from READ and SONG in collaboration with an Indian colleague.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description Rwandan Workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact The
The workshop was attended by 23 participants from Ministries, Public Agencies, Districts, Administrative Sectors, NGOs/INGOs, ICS associations and cooperatives. The workshop aimed at developing an understanding ofthe impact of political decentralization in Rwanda
on decentralized energy access.
The objectives of the workshops were
(1) To confirm the project team's understanding of the systems of local government in Rwanda
(2) To understand better the role of local governments in addressing energy access issues in Rwanda
(3)To map key stakeholders in the energy sector
(4) To learn lessons from the Rwandan experience for the new Kenyan decentralization process, particularlyin relation to energy issues
(5) To understand how local governance works in practice here, the opportunities that it provides for energy access progress and any
potential limitation.
In-line with the objectives of the workshop participants shared knowledge and their experiences on decentralized energy access in Rwanda, discussed challenges to energy decentralization and identified measures to enhance capacities of local authorities to play their role in promoting access to clean energy in Rwanda.
Major constraints to the role of Districts and sectors in energy access in Rwanda include:
1. Renewable energy solutions are still very expensive yet the purchase power of the rural population is still very low (45% of Rwandans are below poverty line and majority in rural areas),
2. There is limited technical capacity for the installation, operation and maintenance of clean energy technologies such as solar and biogas,
particularly in rural areas.
3. Some behavioural characteristics among the population negatively impacts on the adoption of modern renewable energy technologies
However, with a clear national energy development plan and the government's political will towards real decentralisation of authority, resources and capacities, the role of the decentralised authorities in energy access is expected to increase.
At the end of the workshop, participants identified key next steps to enhance decentralised energy access:
(i) The government and stakeholders to explore innovative financing mechanisms for clean energy projects, drawing on experiences such as M-kopa used in Kenya
(ii) Districts and Sectors to use the Participatory Market Mapping tool for better coordination of stakeholders' efforts and taking advantage of available synergies for enhanced energy access
(iii) Energy platforms to be created at the District and Sector levels to provide more space for stakeholders' discussions on energy challenges and promote harmonized planning and implementation of energy programmes for more impact
(iv) The government and stakeholders to engage into systematic capacity
building process to create a critical mass of technicians at District and Sector levels who are capable of installing,
operating, maintaining, repairing renewable energy technologies in the country
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL http://thereadproject.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/READ-Workshop-Report_Rwanda_Final-15.10.14.pd...
 
Description USES Annual Workshop Presentation 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Several of the READ team presented key lessons from the READ project at the second annual USES Workshop. This reflected on the relationships established between partner organizations, approaches towards project impact and sustainability and experiences with dissemination via bespoke videos and phone APPS.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://lcedn.com/uses/2015/11/27/second-annual-uses-workshop-september-2015/