ARTICLE
Tinkering with Turbines:
Ethics and Energy
Decentralization in Scotland
Annabel Pinker, James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen
ABSTRACT
This article builds on literature exploring the entanglements between so-
cio-political life and energy to consider how alternative, more decentralized
arrangements of electricity production, delivery, and use might affect how
humans relate to one another and to non-human worlds, or trouble existing
formations of power and governance. In particular, it considers how two
distinct modalities of local engagement with energy schemes at radically
different scales—a Scottish peninsula’ s 40-year experiment with off-grid
micro-wind turbines and the community benefit fund arrangements arising
from the proposed construction of one of Scotland’ s largest windfarms—
rely upon ethical processes for their material and political operation. I argue
that energy decentralization—the gradual, multi-scalar reconfiguration of
infrastructures and power relations implied by moves towards greater local
involvement in energy production, distribution, and use—necessitates an
ethical mode that disrupts fixed moral claims in favor of the ongoing nego-
tiation of infrastructural open-endedness and continued attempts to work
across difference and uncertainty. [Keywords: Energy, material politics,
infrastructure, ethics, technology, decentralization]
Anthropological Quarterly, Vol. 91, No. 2, p. 709–748, ISSN 0003-5491. © 2018 by the Institute for
Ethnographic Research (IFER) a part of The George Washington University. All rights reserved.
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