4.2 Article

Solar Power and its Discontents: Critiquing Off-grid Infrastructures of Inclusion in East Africa

Journal

DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE
Volume 52, Issue 4, Pages 902-926

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/dech.12668

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With the increasing influx of private equity investment, employees and customers of off-grid solar companies in Africa have started to question the industry's commercial dynamics, especially regarding issues such as the mis-selling of solar home systems and the technical limits of off-grid infrastructures. They believe that this industry is influenced by dominant market paradigms, as well as relationships to nation, community, and family.
Since 2010, solar energy companies in North America and Europe have played a pivotal role in delivering clean, reliable and sustainable electricity to millions of people living off the grid across sub-Saharan Africa. However, today, off-grid solar energy in Africa is no longer seen as an unmitigated social and economic good. Inflows of private equity investment have led the employees and customers of off-grid solar companies to question the industry's commercial dynamics. Their critiques address the mis-selling of solar home systems and the technical limits of off-grid infrastructures for domestic production, framed both by dominant market paradigms and by relationships to nation, community and family. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in East Africa's off-grid solar industry, this study assembles these critical perspectives into a wider analysis of off-grid solar power as an adverse 'infrastructure of inclusion'.

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