RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES TRANSFER TO RURAL COMMUNITIES: LEARNINGS AND CHALLENGES FROM THE EXPERIENCE OF AYLLU SOLAR PROJECT IN CHILE

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LCEDN 2017 CONFERENCE: Equity and Energy Justice RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES TRANSFER TO RURAL COMMUNITIES: LEARNINGS AND CHALLENGES FROM THE EXPERIENCE OF AYLLU SOLAR PROJECT IN CHILE Marcia Montedonico Energy Center -University of Chile 11th-12th September 2017, Durham University

OVERVIEW Context: Energy Centre at University of Chile Methodological framework Socio-technical systems Co-construction Chilean experience: Ayllu Solar project Learnings and challenges

ENERGY CENTRE Faculty of Physical and Mathematical Sciences - UNIVERSITY OF CHILE To create interdisciplinary, collaborative, innovative and inclusive energy R&D solutions that assure sustainable development SOCIO-ENVIRONMENTAL AREA A multi-disciplinary area: agronomist, anthropologist, sociologist, natural resources engineer Through an interdisciplinary work (together with engineers) the socioenvironmental area integrate the historic, cultural, politicals and environmental dimensions in order to give appropriateness (pertinence/relevance) and sustainability to the technical solutions developed by other areas of the Centre.

SOCIO-TECHNICAL SYSTEMS Sociotechnical systems: Specific organizational systems built around a technological innovation, whose social structures are made of decisions (Luhmann, 2000). Inter-relation between technology, social actors, and the social structures that develop around their operation (Ropohl, 1999; Ulli-Beer, 2013). Technology and Infrastructure (application) Social Structure (management model) Relevant environment: Sociocultural, environmental, economic, institutional

CO-CONSTRUCTION METHODOLOGY CHALLENGE OBJECTIVE How to develop energy projects that foster the use of renewable energies and achieve improvements in the livelihoods of a community in a lasting manner? To develop energy solutions where communities appropriate themselves of the technologies and manage to establish resilient sociotechnical systems, in the context of successful energy transitions.

CO-CONSTRUCTION METHODOLOGY STAGES Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 SOCIO-TECHNICAL DIAGNOSTICS AND TEAM BUILDING SOCIO-TECHNICAL DESIGN AND SUSTAINABILITY PLAN IMPLEMENTATION AND FIRST IMPRESSION OPERATION, EVALUATION AND DISSEMINATION Define technical-structural borders (co-construction scope) Represent diversity and local leadership Share principles of transdisciplinarity Train participants for informed decision making and acknowledge local knowledge Jointly define technical and organizational characteristics Development a sustainability plan and resilience indicators Implement project with the active participation of the community Register first impressions and feedbacks Follow-up and monitoring Develop strategies to tackle weaknesses Project dissemination

AYLLU SOLAR: SOLAR ENERGY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT FOR ARICA AND PARINACOTA REGION

AYLLU SOLAR PROJECT Ayllu means community in the Aymara and Quechua languages, which are the indigenous languages of the communities of Arica and Parinacota in the north of Chile, who are the main participants and beneficiaries of this five-year project. The main objective of this project is to create human capital in order to promote and reinforce the sustainable development of urban and rural communities through the use of solar energy, in accordance to the needs of each area. Creation of cost-effective, replicable and scalable energy solutions based on solar energy. Train human capital capacities for an effective development of solar energy solutions. And ensuring the sustainability of effective solar energy solutions, business models, support network, community involvement, and an appropriate institutional framework.

SELECTED PROJECTS REFERENCES PROJECTS Vítor-Chaca Processing agricultural products with solar energy Visviri Camelid fiber processing and mobile shearing system based in solar energy Camarones Shrimp farming with intensive solar water treatment Putre Valorization of prehispanic routes for tourism with solar applications

CO-CONSTRUCTION OF REFERENCES PROJECTS IMPLEMENTATION Design Operation and maintenance Management of the technological application Beneficiaries role Traditional approach Developed by the technicians Dependent on external technicians Defined under technical criteria, externalized or not considered The communities are passive receivers Ayllu Project Developed jointly between the technical team and the community Installation of technical capacities in the community to allow the inhabitants of the territory to operate and maintain the project Developed jointly with the community, based and giving relevance to the local reality The community plays an active role and participates of the fundamental decisions that define the project

CO-CONSTRUCTION OF REFERENCES PROJECTS IMPLEMENTATION Presentation selected DIAGNOSIS of DESIGN IMPLEMENTATION Commissioning OPERATION AND EVALUATION jan18 aug16 oct16 dec16 feb17 apr17 jun17 aug17 oct17 dec17 feb18 apr18 jun18 aug18 oct18 dec18 Design definition Plenaries and meetings Education for decision making process Implementation Plenary and Meetings Jointly implementation Operation and maintenance Training Commissioning and project evaluation Plenary and Meetings Training for system resilience, learning, and continuous improvement Final Transfer Creation of human capital capacities

GENERAL LAGOS: Camelid fiber processing with solar energy

GENERAL LAGOS Northernmost location of Chile, in the three-frontier sector with Peru and Bolivia Average altitude of 4069 [m a.s.l.] Decreasing population of 1,179 inhabitants (year 2002) to 594 year (2015). Isolated, off-grid location. No rural drinking water or sewage systems. High rate of economic poverty of 33.76% compared to the national average of 14.4% (year 2013). Cold semi-arid climate, strong winds, high thermal oscillation, rainfall and thunderstorms in summer, snow in winter and high solar radiation throughout the year. The camelid cattle farming is the predominant productive activity at General Lagos Chile's highland communities are interspersed with internal territorial conflicts associated with the lack of regularization of land titles. Depopulation mainly associated with a historical neglect on the part of the state and a subsequent migration of the younger population to the city of Arica, in search of greater education and labor opportunities.

CO-CONSTRUCTION IN GENERAL LAGOS IMPLEMENTATION Economic co-construction scope/boundaries Legal Final design RP Technical Local team building Social Environmental

CO-CONSTRUCTION IN GENERAL LAGOS IMPLEMENTATION ENERGY EDUCATION Trainning to informed decision taking Booklets Conceptual mockups

CO-CONSTRUCTION IN GENERAL LAGOS IMPLEMENTATION PLENARIES To take decision

CO-CONSTRUCTION IN GENERAL LAGOS IMPLEMENTATION Co-construcción margins: Spinning machine? Wool loading points? Mobile shearing system? ADJUSTMENTS After co-construction Finally: Incorporation of spinning machine Only few loading points No mobile shearing

CHALLENGES AND LEARNINGS To have a diagnostic of the territory as finely as possible: Aspects such as economic, technical, socio-cultural, geographic characteristics. Mismatches in the expectations of the implementation team and the community original idea become from the community vs when it not => participation is directly affected. Work with an established organization as a counterpart, institutions, public bodies, programmes, etc. sinergies Difficulties given by educational gaps and sociocultural differences between the implementation team and the community. Aymara people and the aging of population difficulties to obtain an effective communication. It is recommended to use didactic materials or boundary objects that facilitate dialogue between actors and reduce knowledge gaps.

CHALLENGES AND LEARNINGS Common understanding of the participation level proposed: Participation must be avoided in order to legitimize decisions already taken only should be used when there is a possibility that it may influence the decision-making process. Inside the implementation team (professionals) the interdisciplinary work requires a framework of common understanding, both about the level or participation expected inside the project and on the social complexity and the challenges that this work entails. Clear rules of the game responsibilities of communities and the technical team, establishing roles. Early establisment of the margins of co-constructions which aspects are available to discuss and which are not Welfare culture (assistencialism) use to be passive beneficiaries. The origin of the financing could affect the disposition to participate. It is necessary to generate an impact on the productive dynamics of the territory, connecting the utility of the proposed technology to the material needs of the local context.

THANK YOU! www.ayllusolar.cl www.comunidadsolar.cl Marcia Montedonico Energy Center -University of Chile