Australian communities are increasingly experiencing extreme weather events, many of which cause power outages through damage to power lines and infrastructure. People caught in situations like those experienced by Mallacoota and Lismore must find ways around power outages to communicate, cook food, access money and more.
Energy Ready is a project that aims to build communities’ resilience and to be prepared to take action if their power goes out. It was funded by Energy Consumers Australia and delivered in partnership with the UTS Institute for Sustainable Futures (ISF), the Community Power Agency and Parallel Lines.
The project’s major output is the Energy Ready toolkit, a publicly available free resource for communities. The toolkit contains the Energy Ready guidebook, which explains how communities can boost their energy resilience and disaster response, and step-by-step instructions for seven simple activities that communities can do to help them examine the risks they face, identify shared priorities and develop a plan of action that’s tailored to their needs and values. The toolkit also includes materials such as flash cards and plan templates to enable these activities.
Get the Energy Ready toolkit
Community connections
To set the parameters of the project, ISF first conducted a review of how community energy resilience is defined and what it means for communities in the face of climate extremes. The research revealed that collaboration is crucial in preparing for, responding to and recovering from environmental disasters and that forming social relationships and together exploring strategies to find technical location-based energy solutions are key to building energy-resilient communities.
The next step was to work out how this collaboration might be activated and for this, the project team turned to communities themselves.
The second phase of the project involved close community consultation, led by the Community Power Agency (CPA). CPA are facilitation and education experts in the renewable energy space and drew on their rich experience of working with communities to conduct workshops in six locations around Australia. The locations chosen – Mullumbimby and Lake Macquarie in NSW, Gympie and Magnetic Island in Queensland, and Bonang and Mornington Peninsula in Victoria – represent communities that either have experienced an environmental disaster, or are at risk of experiencing one in the future.
The workshops involved hearing from communities about their experiences, how they prepared and responded to extended power outages, what went well and what didn’t, and their ideas for things a community might consider when putting together an energy resilience plan. Researchers knew from the literature review that communication and social relationships are important in a disaster situation, so the workshops explored ways of communicating with no power and how solar and battery storage can provide back-up power for communications. At the workshops, community members also mapped possible resources, such as diesel generators, that could be commandeered in a time of need.
From workshop to toolkit
The ideas and responses that came up during the workshops formed the basis of the Energy Ready guidebook. Working together with Chris Gaul of Parallel Lines design agency, the project partners developed a simple step-by-step guide to community planning for energy resilience that includes advice for putting together a community working group, methods for making decisions, and activities and resources for community groups to use when putting together their resilience plan.
Disaster response and energy resilience experts were also consulted in putting together the guide.
The result is the first edition of an easy-to-understand, publicly available resource for communities. Its aim is to prompt conversations about energy resilience and shape these into all-inclusive community actions that meet the needs of different groups and individuals during difficult times
The importance of working together
The Energy Ready project has foregrounded the importance of collaboration, not least among the project’s partners. Energy Consumers Australia helped to bring in resilience experts, government representatives and disaster response agencies to support the project; Parallel Lines brought a wealth of experience in visualising social and environmental aspects, the Community Power Agency leveraged their expertise in engaging communities in discussion about energy and forming plans of action, and ISF contributed rigorous research methods and experience in translating research into usable resources.
The next steps…
Because the Energy Ready guide has been made in consultation with communities, for communities, it’s important that it is now tested by communities. The project team hope to capture community feedback on this pilot version of the guide, and to further develop it and improve it in response to this feedback.
Introducing Energy Ready webinar
On 12 December 2023, the team behind Energy Ready hosted a free webinar for anyone interested in boosting their community’s energy resilience. You can watch the recording here to find out more about the project and how to use the Energy Ready toolkit.
RESEARCH OUTPUTS
Understanding the concept of community energy resilience and its applications (2023) (Report)
Researchers
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Research Director
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Senior Research Consultant
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Research Director
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Senior Research Consultant
Years
- 2022-2023
Location
- Australia-wide
Client
- Energy Consumers Australia
Partners
- Community Power Agency (CPA)
- Parallel Lines
SDGs
This project is working towards UN Sustainable Development Goal 7, 11, 13.