Abstract
In international energy policy, programmes and consumer research, a dominant ideal consumer is emerging. This consumer is typically a human adult who has the agency to make autonomous, functional and rational decisions about his or her household’s energy consumption. This article seeks to disrupt this dominant anthropocentric conceptualisation of the consumer and provide new ways of knowing and potentially intervening in the lives of energy consumers. Drawing on qualitative research conducted with householders living in Sydney, Australia, and theories of practice, materiality and agency from sociology and science and technology studies, we seek to understand consumers as human and nonhuman actants operating in distributed assemblages of practice. We explore the implications of conceptualising non-traditional consumers of energy, such as babies, pets, pests and pool pumps, as performers of or materials in practices that consume energy. Our analysis provides new ways of potentially intervening in patterns of energy consumption. We argue that policy makers need to refocus their attention on finding routes into assemblages of practice to achieve change. We conclude by calling for further exploration and recognition of the myriad curious consumers found in households.
References
| Accenture (2011) Revealing the Values of the New Energy Consumer: Accenture End-Consumer Observatory on Electricity Management 2011, Dublin: Accenture. Google Scholar | |
| Accenture (2012) The New Energy Consumer: Balancing Strategic and Operational Imperatives. Reference Guide 2.0, Dublin: Accenture. Google Scholar | |
| Attfield, J (2000) Wild Things: The Material Culture of Everyday Life, Oxford: Berg Publishers. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Australian Energy Market Commission (AEMC) (2011) Issues Paper: Power of Choice – Giving Consumers Options in the Way They Use Electricity, Sydney, NSW, Australia: AEMC. Google Scholar | |
| Bennett, J (2005) The agency of assemblages and the North American blackout. Public Culture 17: 445–465. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
| Bennett, J (2007) Edible matter. New Left Review 45: 133–145. Google Scholar | |
| Bennett, J (2010) Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things, Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Coole, D (2005) Rethinking agency: A phenomenological approach to embodiment and agentic capacities. Political Studies 53: 124–142. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
| Coole D (2013) Agentic capacities and capacious historical materialism: Thinking with new materialisms in the political sciences. Millennium: Journal of International Studies. 41(3): 451–469. Google Scholar | |
| Gram-Hanssen, K (2007) Teenage consumption of cleanliness: How to make it sustainable? Sustainability: Science, Practice and Policy 3: 1–9. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Gram-Hanssen, K (2011) Understanding change and continuity in residential energy consumption. Journal of Consumer Culture 11: 61–78. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
| Hargreaves, T (2011) Practice-ing behaviour change: Applying social practice theory to pro-environmental behaviour change. Journal of Consumer Culture 11: 79–99. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
| Latour, B (2005) Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory, New York: Oxford University Press. Google Scholar | |
| Law, J (1993) Modernity, Myth and Materialism, Oxford: Blackwell. Google Scholar | |
| Law, J (2009) Seeing like a survey. Cultural Sociology 3: 239–256. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
| Law, J, Lien, M (2012) Slippery: Field notes on empirical ontology. Social Studies of Science 43: 363–378. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
| Reckwitz, A (2002) The status of the ‘material’ in theories of culture. From ‘social structure’ to ‘artefacts’. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 32: 195–217. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
| Schatzki, TR (2010) Materiality and social life. Nature and Culture 5: 123–149. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
| Shove, E (1997) Revealing the invisible: Sociology, energy and the environment. In: Redclift, M, Woodgate, G (eds) The International Handbook of Environmental Sociology, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 271–273. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Shove, E (2003) Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience: The Social Organisation of Normality, Oxford: Berg Publishers. Google Scholar | |
| Shove, E, Pantzar, M (2005) Consumers, producers and practices: Understanding the invention and reinvention of Nordic walking. Journal of Consumer Culture 5: 43–64. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
| Shove, E, Pantzar, M, Watson, M (2012) The Dynamics of Social Practice: Everyday Life and How It Changes, London: Sage. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Smart Grid Australia (SGA) (2011) Maximising Consumer Benefits, Melbourne, VIC, Australia: SGA. Google Scholar | |
| Smart Grid Consumer Collaborative (SGCC) (2012) 2012 State of the Consumer Report, Roswell, GA: SGCC. Google Scholar | |
| Strengers, Y (2012) Peak electricity demand and social practice theories: Reframing the role of change agents in the energy sector. Energy Policy 44: 226–234. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
| Strengers, Y (2013) Smart Energy Technologies in Everyday Life: Smart Utopia?, London: Palgrave Macmillan. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Trentmann, F (2006) Knowing consumers – Histories, identities, practices: An introduction. In: Trentmann, F (ed) The Making of the Consumer: Knowledge, Power and Identify in the Modern World, Oxford: Berg Publishers, pp. 1–29. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Valocchi, M, Juliano, J, Schurr, A (2009) Lighting the Way: Understanding the Smart Energy Consumer, Somers, NY: IBM Institute for Business Value. Google Scholar | |
| Van Vliet, B (2006) Citizen-consumer roles in environment management of large technological systems. In: Verbeek, P-P, Slob, A (eds) User Behavior and Technology Development: Shaping Sustainable Relations between Consumers and Technologies, Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 309–318. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
| Van Vliet, B, Chappells, H, Shove, E (2005) Infrastructures of Consumption: Environmental Innovation in the Utilities Industries, London: Earthscan. Google Scholar | |
| Warde, A (2005) Consumption and theories of practice. Journal of Consumer Culture 5: 131–153. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
| Wheeler W and Williams L (2012) The animals turn. New Formations 5–7. Google Scholar | |
| Zpryme (2011) The New Energy Consumer, Austin, TX: Zpryme Smart Grid Insights. Google Scholar |
