Community energy's time to shine
Why won't the government give people control over where their energy comes from? Plus, what going zero-waste *actually* involves.
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Transformative lessons Iāve learnt while switching to zero-wasteĀ
Moji Igun has spent the past five years cutting landfill waste out of her life. She tells us what itās really like to exist outside of a waste system many of us rarely question.Ā
Zero-waste living, where people follow a set of principles with the ultimate aim of sending as little to landfill as possible, has exploded in popularity within the past decade. Analysis from Google Trends shows interest in the topic began to rise exponentially in 2010. It reached its peak in 2019 just before the pandemic started.
Moji Igun is a founder, speaker and writer who has lived as close to zero waste as possible for around five years. She tells us what sheās learnt.Ā
When did you make the jump, and what did you notice straight away?Ā
I first heard the term āzero wasteā around 2016 at the height of the viral mason jar era of the movement. This was the first time in my adult life that I was forced to confront the impact my consumer choices had on the world around me.Ā
I was used to choosing the cheapest and most affordable option, rather than taking a critical look at the consequences of my personal patterns of consumption. My initial attempts to avoid sending anything to landfill provided me with a new perspective on the world.
It occurred to me that, while the materials we decide no longer have a useful purpose have always been burned, buried, hauled away, or returned to the earth, this is happening terrifyingly quickly now. Our economic system now depends on the constant pursuit of more.Ā
The way in which we treat both materials and living beings as disposable is entirely unsustainable. I had been thinking about zero waste in terms of the end of an itemās life cycle āĀ but realised so much of the approach was about the beginning (making the decision to purchase) as well.Ā
Is it *really* worth going to so much effort as an individual?Ā
It can certainly feel like our actions are insignificant. With the majority of harm stemming from a small yet powerful group of people, individual actions alone cannot adequately address the climate crisis.Ā
However, I firmly believe that cultural resets sprout from the internal shifts that occur within each of us.
Other popular lifestyle movements like minimalism, conscious consumerism, and slow living have grown in popularity alongside zero waste. If the term āzero wasteā fails to inspire action for you, leave it behind and find an ideology that does. Ultimately, the goal is to resist the tendencies of a world whose hunger for more can never be satisfied.
What are the main positives youāve experienced?Ā
Zero waste has led me to practice growing my own food. Iāve begun to learn more about the plants and animals in my area. Iāve also grown more interested in studying the lessons from my own Indigenous ancestors (the Yoruba from West Africa).Ā
I also get to work with businesses to co-create solutions that will make it easier for us all to make sustainable choices ā and shift towards a more circular economy. Whether Iām performing a trash audit, creating educational resources, or playing around in the dirt, Iām repeatedly reminded that beauty can and will emerge from decay.

What do you hope societyās relationship with waste will look like in the future?Ā
Right now, total zero waste living is impossible. Trash is baked into our system, to the point where sending items to the landfill is more economical than sending them to be repurposed. For the moment, strategically implementing local solutions ā which allow us to thrive and meet our most basic needs ā is key.Ā
Further on, corporations and individuals alike need to work towards a truly circular economy. A circular economy shifts the norm away from constant extraction to one of circulating material flows, built on the foundation of renewable energy.Ā
This model goes far beyond recycling and includes resource sharing, repair, reuse, and more. This circular way of thinking stems from Indigenous practices that call for us all to tune in to our relationship to the land and life around us.
Moji Igun is the founder of Blue Daisi Consulting.
Taking back power: is it time to think seriously about community energy?Ā
In light of Europeās energy crisis, community-led schemes could provide a more secure and renewable system.Ā By Al Howard.
As the energy sector is destabilised, the need for ācommunity energyā is more pressing than ever.
The movement, which supports a transition from fossil-fuel-generated power to renewable sources of electricity, aims to put power into the hands of communities who can buy into local solar, hydro, or wind-powered energy solutions.
Placing energy back into the hands of communities could provide 2.2M UK homes with renewable energy by 2030, whilst reducing household bills by Ā£150M a year. Additionally, such a move could raise Ā£1.8M for local economies and provide up to 8,700 jobs across the UK.Ā
The cost of Europeās energy crisis
Within the context of our latest energy crisis, getting a greater portion of our energy from community projects seems like a no-brainer.
Whilst 43% of the UKās electricity is produced by renewables, approximately half remains reliant on gas-fired power plants dependent on fossil fuels.
Meanwhile, a crucible of issues from ageing nuclear reactors to a chaotic market (further destabilised by the pandemic and Brexit) has left the UK dangerously reliant on foreign powers for its gas and electricity supply.Ā
Last week, the UKās seventh biggest energy supplier, Bulb, went into special administration. Its promise to continue to supply its 1.7M household customers will borrow heavily from the public pocket.
According to Investec, the public bailout for electricity companies this winter roughly equates to Ā£120 per customer or a vast overall total of 1.7B.Ā As a result, the public has been primed to expect blackouts this winter ā one of the coldest yet. Gas and electricity prices are expected to rise astronomically.
Aside from the financial burden on the public, Europeās energy crisis risks jeopardising the UKās targets for cutting carbon emissions. Our current transition to āclean energyā is not going as quickly as hoped, as global demand for power currently outweighs supply.Ā

Making it happen
What might a community energy project involve? In Gwynedd, North Wales, Energy Local Bethesda is harnessing the power of the Ogwen river with a community-owned hydroelectric plant.
The project, driven by the citizensā desire to challenge the effects of climate change, began in 2016 and equipped local houses with smart meters, reducing household energy costs by 10-30%.
The scheme has been an overwhelming success and is now able to supply the community with energy at a lower price than the national grid, whilst providing surplus revenue to reinvest in future renewable projects.
Another project is run by social enterprise Energise Barnsley. To reduce fuel poverty in the Yorkshire town, the council and a handful of independent organisations bought into a community-owned energy scheme.
The project oversaw the instalment of solar panels to power 321 council-owned properties, 75% of which housed elderly tenants, who saved over Ā£40,000 in bills. Further profits from the scheme were channelled into a community benefit fund.Ā
Working towards better legislation
Despite these promising case studies, the UK government legislation that has so far hindered the development of community energy. People do not yet have the right to local supply.
āIf you want to buy your electricity from local renewable sources, such as the local school or sports hall that have solar panels on their roofsā, write campaign group Power for People, āyou cannot.ā
āWe all buy our electricity from a utility company that sources it from anything connected to the National Grid, be it a field of solar panels in Wiltshire or a gas-fired power station in Yorkshire.ā
The non-profit highlights āunfair regulationsā and āhugely disproportionate costsā. It is fighting to get something called the Local Electricity Bill ā which would enable an overhaul of the current system and allow individuals to control where they get their energy from ā through Parliament.
Debated yesterday: the Local Electricity Bill
Yesterday, the Bill was debated ā with cross-party support from MPs representing all four UK nations.
Caroline Lucas MP emphasised it would allow for "a proliferation of local energy companies, a real diversity and ecology of those companies and a much stronger sector as a result.ā
āCommunity energy isnāt just a nice to haveā, she said; and canāt be ājust the cherry on top of the sustainability cake, it is a fundamental part of the total energy mix.ā
At the end, Wera Hobhouse MP concluded,
āI thank the Minister for offering to meet us and have that engagement. I am a little disappointed that he has still not quite understood what we all think: that the current system does not work because it is too centralised, and that the Government must face the brave new world of decentralisation to set free the power of local electricity.ā
āI hope that we will receive a more positive reply when we come back to debate this topic, yet again, in this Chamber or the main Chamber.ā
The pursuit of greater capacity for community energy continues.
Visit Power for People for tips on how best to take action.
Al Howard is a staff writer at Ours to Save, interested in space, art and saving the planet. You can follow her on Instagram.