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  4. UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF THE SUN. THE TECHNO POLITICS OF LEBANON’S RUSHED ENERGY TRANSITION

UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF THE SUN. THE TECHNO POLITICS OF LEBANON’S RUSHED ENERGY TRANSITION

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File(s)
Stubenberg_cornellgrad_0058F_14973.pdf (10.93 MB)
No Access Until
2028-06-18
Permanent Link(s)
https://doi.org/10.7298/h371-yp35
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/117646
Collections
Cornell Theses and Dissertations
Author
Stubenberg, Camillo
Abstract

This dissertation analyzes Lebanon’s swift shift towards decentralized solar energy in response to the severe energy crisis of 2021. Prolonged fuel shortages and widespread electricity blackouts, resulting from political and economic collapse, compelled Lebanese households, businesses, and institutions to rapidly adopt off-grid solar technologies, marking one of the fastest renewable energy transitions globally. The research explores the sociotechnical and political dimensions of this transformation, highlighting its implications for governance, socio-economic inequalities, and everyday life.Grounded in ethnographic fieldwork conducted from 2021 to 2023, the study employs participant observation, in-depth interviews with energy entrepreneurs, policymakers, and everyday solar users, complemented by policy analysis. The methodological approach integrates comparative frameworks from Science and Technology Studies (STS), political economy, and environmental perspectives, balancing detailed local insights with broader comparative implications. The dissertation situates Lebanon as an instructive case of "experiments" in energy transitions, reflecting wider global patterns of rapid solar adoption triggered by infrastructure failures and economic or environmental crises. Key findings reveal a complex interplay between liberation from unreliable state utilities and costly diesel generators, and new dependencies and inequalities emerging from solarization. Wealthier households achieve energy autonomy, while poorer households experience persistent energy shortages due to limited battery storage. Additionally, Lebanon’s decentralized solar economy fosters reliance on diasporic financial networks and local patronage systems amidst a dysfunctional banking sector. The research also highlights uneven geographical outcomes, noting urban reliance on diesel generators due to limited rooftop space, while rural areas increasingly adopt solar home systems. The shift towards a "circadian economy," where economic activities align with daylight availability, reshapes local economic geographies and labor practices. Ultimately, Lebanon’s rapid yet improvised solar transition provides critical insights into how shocks to existing energy infrastructures can lead to innovative adaptations, where complete reliance on intermittent renewables introduces new temporal and spatial patterns—what this dissertation terms "the patronage of the sun."

Description
337 pages
Date Issued
2025-05
Keywords
Electricity
•
Energy Transition
•
Renewable
•
social aspects
•
Solar
•
technopolitics
Committee Chair
Leonard, Lori
Committee Member
Pritchard, Sara
Goldstein, Jennifer
Degree Discipline
Development Studies
Degree Name
Ph. D., Development Studies
Degree Level
Doctor of Philosophy
Type
dissertation or thesis
Link(s) to Catalog Record
https://newcatalog.library.cornell.edu/catalog/16938209

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