Abstract
The chapter explains the creation and resistance to change of Thailand’s centralized and fossil-fuel intensive electricity regime through a Sustainability Transition and Multilevel Perspective lens, with an emphasis on the sector’s political economy. The incumbent electricity industry has evolved from a state-owned monopoly to a partially-privatized industry structure dominated by the state utility and several large independent power producers. The analysis demonstrates how important global landscape shifts articulate with the sector’s domestic political economy, including a shifting global development paradigm from developmentalist state to liberal market principles, as well as the impact of waves of global economic crisis. The chapter highlights the role played by civil society coalitions in unsettling the incumbent electricity regime since the late 1970s, despite significant power asymmetries, through opposing problematic projects, advocating for progressive policy, and proposing alternative plans, values and visions for Thailand’s electricity sector. Important but small steps towards sustainability transition are identified, including greater energy conservation and distributed renewable energy generation, the creation of an independent regulator, and a small increase in public participation and accountability in the power planning process. The chapter argues that civil society has been—and will continue to be—important in shaping the incumbent electricity regime and often acts as a catalyst for transition towards sustainability.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
ADB (Asian Development Bank), 2010: Analysis of EIA/EMP in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) Countries and Identification of Gaps, Needs, and Areas for Capacity Development (Manila: Asian Development Bank).
Angel, David; Rock, Michael T., 2009: “Environmental Rationalities and the Development State in East Asia: Prospects for a Sustainability Transition”, in: Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 76,2: 229–40.
Berkhout, Frans; Angel, David; Wieczorek, Anna J., 2009:“Asian Development Pathways and Sustainable Socio-Technical Regimes”, in: Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 76,2: 218–28.
Blake, David J. H., 2013: “Thai Dam-Affected Villagers Demand Fair Compensation”, in: World Rivers Review, 28: 5.
Boonlong, Raine, 2011: “Energy Issues in Thailand”, in: Boonlong, Raine; Farbotko, Carol; Parfondry, Claire; Graham, Colum; Macer, Darryl (Eds.), 2011: Representation and Decision-Making in Environment Planning with Emphasis on Energy Technologies Ethics and Climate Change in Asia and the Pacific (Bangkok: UNESCAP).
Boonlong, Raine; Farbotko, Carol; Parfondry, Claire; Graham, Colum; Macer, Darryl (Eds.), 2011: Representation and Decision-Making in Environment Planning with Emphasis on Energy Technologies Ethics and Climate Change in Asia and the Pacific (Bangkok: UNESCAP).
Brouwer, Ben, 2012: “Institutional Aikido: Bringing Power to the People of Thailand” (San Francisco: The Democracy Center).
Costanza, Robert; Kubiszewski, Ida; Paquet, Peter; King, Jeffrey; Halimi, Shpresa; Sanguanngoi, Hansa; Nguyen, Luong Bach; Frankel, Richard; Ganaseni, Jiragorn; Intralawan, Apisom; Morell, David, 2011: Planning Approaches for Water Resources Development in the Lower Mekong Basin (Portland and Chiang Rai: Portland State University and Mae Fah Luang University).
Dobbin, Frank; Simmons, Beth; Garrett, Geoffrey, 2007: “The Global Diffusion of Public Policies: Social Construction, Coercion, Competition, or Learning?”, in: Annual Review of Sociology, 33,1: 449–72.
Doner, Richard F., 2009: The Politics of Uneven Development: Thailand’s Economic Growth in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
EGAT (Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand), 2010: Thailand’s Power Development Plan (2010–2030) (Bangkok: EGAT).
EPPO (Energy Policy and Planning Office, Ministry of Energy), 2013: Energy Statistic of Thailand 2013 (Bangkok: EPPO).
EPPO (Energy Policy and Planning Office, Ministry of Energy), 2012: Summary of the Thailand Power Development Plan 2012–2030 (PDP2010: Revision 3) (Bangkok: EPPO).
Foran, Tira, 2006: Thailand’s Politics of Power System Planning and Reform (Chiang Mai: Mekong Program on Water Environment and Resilience (M-POWER)).
Foran, Tira, 2013: “Action Research to Improve Electricity Planning: Experience from Thailand”, in: Daniel, Rajesh; Lebel, Louis; Manorom, Kanokwan (Eds.), 2013: Governing the Mekong: Engaging in the Politics of Knowledge (Selangor: SIRDC Press): 49–69.
Foran, Tira; du Pont, Peter T.; Parinya, Panom; Phumaraphand, Napaporn, 2010: “Securing Energy Efficiency as a High Priority: Scenarios for Common Appliance Electricity Consumption in Thailand”, in: Energy Efficiency 3: 347–64.
Foran, Tira; Manorom, Kanokwan, 2009: “Pak Mun Dam: Perpetually Contested?”, in Molle, François; Foran, Tira; Käkönen, Mira (Eds.), Contested Waterscapes in the Mekong Region: Hydropower, Livelihoods and Governance (London, Sterling, VA: Earthscan): 55-80.
Friend, Richard; Pradubsuk, Suphasuk; Badenoch, Nathan; Limpiyawon, Patcharapol (Eds.), 2011: Environmental Governance in Asia: Independent Asessements of National Implementation of Rio Declaration’s Principle 10 (Bangkok: Thailand Environment Institute (TEI)).
Geels, Frank W., 2014: “Regime Resistance against Low-Carbon Transitions: Introducing Politics and Power into the Multi-Level Perspective”, in: Theory, Culture & Society, 31,5: 21–40.
Geels, Frank W., 2011: “The Multi-Level Perspective on Sustainability Transitions: Responses to Seven Criticisms”, in: Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, 1,1: 24–40.
Geels, Frank W., 2002: “Technological Transitions as Evolutionary Reconfiguration Processes: A Multi-Level Perspective and a Case-Study”, in: Research Policy, 31,8–9: 1257–74.
Greacen, Christopher E., 2004: “The Marginalization of ‘Small Is Beautiful’: Micro-Hydroelectricity, Common Property and the Politics of Rural Electricity Provision in Thailand” (PhD dissertation, University of California, Energy and Resources Group).
Greacen, Chris, 2007: “An Emerging Light: Thailand Gives the Go-Ahead to Distributed Energy”, in: Cogeneration & On-Site Power Production Magazine March/April: 65–73.
Greacen, Chris; Footner, James, 2006: Decentralizing Thai Power: Towards a Sustainable Energy System (Bangkok: Greenpeace Southeast Asia).
Greacen, Chris; Palettu, Apsara, 2007: “Electricity Sector Planning and Hydropower”, in: Lebel, Louis; Dore, John; Daniel, Rajesh; Koma, Yang Saing (Eds.), 2007: Democratizing Water Governance in the Mekong Region (Chiang Mai: Mekong Press): 93–126.
Greacen, Chuenchom Sangarasri; Greacen, Chris, 2012: Proposed Power Development Plan (PDP) 2012 and a Framework for Improving Accountability and Performance of Power Sector Planning (Bangkok: Palang Thai).
Greacen, Chuenchom Sangarasri; Greacen, Chris, 2004: “Thailand’s Electricity Reforms: Privatization of Benefits and Socialization of Costs and Risks”, in: Pacific Affairs, 77,3: 717–541.
Greenpeace Southeast Asia, 2005: All Emission, No Solution: Energy Hypocrisy and the Asian Development Bank in Southeast Asia (Bangkok: Greenpeace Southeast Asia).
Grin, John; Rotmans, Jan; Schot, Johan (Eds.), 2010: Transitions to Sustainable Development: New Directions in the Study of Long Term Transformative Change (New York and London: Routledge).
Harashima, Yohei, 2000: “Environmental Governance in Selected Asian Developing Countries”, in: International Review for Environmental Strategies, 1,1: 193–207.
Hausman, William J.; Hertner, Peter; Wilkins, Mira, 2008: Global Electrification: Multinational Enterprise and International Finance in the History of Light and Power 1878–2007 (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press).
Herbertson, Kirk, 2012: “Citizen Science Supports a Healthy Mekong”, in: World Rivers Review, 28, 2: 1,7. Hess, David J., 2014: “Sustainability Transitions: A Political Coalition Perspective”, in: Research Policy, 43, 2: 278–83.
Hildyard, Nicholas; Lohmann, Larry; Sexton, Sarah, 2012: Energy Security: For Whom? For What? (Sturminster Newton: The Corner House).
Hirsch, Philip; Hogan, Zeb S.; Lanza, Guy R.; Blake, David J. H., 2011: Technical Review of the Xayaburi Environmental Impact Assessment (Berkeley: International Rivers).
Hirsch, Philip, 1998: “Dams, Resources and the Politics of Environment in Mainland Southeast Asia”, in: Hirsch, Philip; Warren, Carol (Eds.), 1998: The Politics of Environment in Southeast Asia: Resources and Resistance (London: Routledge): 55–70.
IEA (International Energy Association), 2013: Southeast Asia Energy Outlook (Paris, IEA).
Jomo, Kwame Sundaram, 2001: “Introduction: Growth and Structural Change in the Second Tier Southeast Asian NICS”, in: Jomo, Kwame Sundaram (Ed.), 2001: Southeast Asia’s Industrialization: Industrial Policy, Capabilities and Sustainability (New York: Palgrave Macmillan): 1–29.
Kamsamrong, Jirapa; Sorapipatana, Chumnong, 2014: “An Assessment of Energy Security in Thailand’s Power Generation”, in: Sustainable Energy Technologies and Assessments, 7: 45–54.
Lohmann, Larry; Hildyard, Nicholas, 2013: Energy Alternatives: Surveying the Territory (Sturminster Newton: The Corner House).
Markard, Jochen; Raven, Rob; Truffer, Bernhard, 2012: “Sustainability Transitions: An Emerging Field of Research and Its Prospects”, in: Research Policy, 41,6: 955–67.
Matthews, Nathanial, 2012: “Water Grabbing in the Mekong Basin—an Analysis of the Winners and Losers of Thailand’s Hydropower Development in Lao PDR”, in: Water Alternatives, 5,2: 392–411.
Meadowcroft, James, 2011: “Engaging with the Politics of Sustainability Transitions”, in: Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, 1: 70–75.
Meerow, Sara A.; Baud, Isa, 2012: “Generating Resilience: Exploring the Contribution of the Small Power Producer and Very Small Power Producer Programs to the Resilience of Thailand’s Power Sector”, in: International Journal of Urban Sustainable Development, 4,1: 20–38.
Merme, Vincent; Ahlers, Rhodante; Gupta, Joyeeta, 2014: “Private equity, public affair: Hydropower financing in the Mekong Basin”, in: Global Environmental Change, 24: 20–29.
Middleton, Carl; Matthews, Nathanial; Mirumachi, Naho, 2015: “Whose Risky Business?: Public–Private Partnerships (PPP), Build–Operate–Transfer (BOT) and Large Hydropower Dams in the Mekong Region”, in: Matthews, Nathanial; Geheb, Kim (Eds.), 2015 Hydropower Development in the Mekong Region: Political, Socioeconomic and Environmental Perspectives (London: Earthscan): 127–152.
Middleton, Carl; Dore, John, 2015: “Transboundary Water and Electricity Governance in Mainland Southeast Asia: Linkages, Disjunctures and Implications”, in: International Journal of Water Governance 3,1: 93–120.
Middleton, Carl; Garcia, Jelson; Foran, Tira, 2009: “Old and New Hydropower Players in the Mekong Region: Agendas and Strategies”, in: Molle, François; Foran, Tira; Käkönen, Mira (Eds.), 2009 Contested Waterscapes in the Mekong Region: Hydropower, Livelihoods and Governance (London, Sterling, VA: Earthscan): 23–54.
Middleton, Carl; Allouche, Jeremy; Gyawali, Dipak; Allen, Sarah, 2015: “The Rise and Implications of the Water–Energy–Food Nexus in Southeast Asia through an Environmental Justice Lens”, in: Water Alternatives, 8,1: 627–54.
Middleton, Carl, 2012: “Transborder Environmental Justice in Regional Energy Trade in Mainland South-East Asia”, in: Austrian Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 5,2: 292–315.
Missingham, Bruce, 2003: The Assembly of the Poor: From Local Struggle to National Social Movement (Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books).
Nakawiro, Thanawat; Bhattacharyya, Subhes C., 2010: “Security of Supply Concerns and Environmental Impacts of Electricity Capacity Expansion in Thailand”, in: International Energy Journal, 11,4: 181–92.
Nakawiro, Thanawat; Bhattacharyya, Subhes C; Limmeechokchai, Bundit, 2008: “Electricity Capacity Expansion in Thailand: An Analysis of Gas Dependence and Fuel Import Reliance”, in: Energy, 33, 5: 712–23.
Nevins, Joseph; Peluso, Nancy Lee, 2008: Taking Southeast Asia to Market (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press).
On, Thita, 2015: “Hybrid Environmental Governance in Very Small Power Producers (VSPPs): Comparative Case Studies in Three Communities Micro-Hydropower Projects, Thailand” (MA dissertation, Chulalongkorn University, MA in International Development Studies Programme).
Pavitt, Keith, 1984: “Sectoral patterns of technical change: Towards a taxonomy and a theory”, in: Research Policy, 13: 343–73.
Phongpaichit, Pasuk; Baker, Chris, 2012: “Populist Challenge to the Establishment: Thaksin Shinawatra and the Transformation of Thai Politics”, in: Robison, Richard (Ed.), 2012: Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics (London and New York: Routledge): 83–96.
Phongpaichit, Pasuk; Baker, Chris (Eds.), 2008: Thai Capital after the 1997 Crisis (Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books).
Phongpaichit, Pasuk; Baker, Chris, 2002: Thailand Economy and Politics (2nd edition) (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press).
Phongpaichit, Pasuk; Benyaapikul, Pornthep, 2013: Political Economy Dimension of a Middle Income Trap: Challenges and Opportunities for Policy Reform: Thailand (Bangkok: Faculty of Economics, Chulalongkorn University).
Sawdon, John, 2014: “The Political Economy of Environmental Technological Change with a Case Study of the Power Sector in Vietnam” (PhD Dissertation, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK, School of International Development).
Schreuer, Anna; Rohracher, Harald; Späth, Philipp, 2010: “Transforming the Energy System: The Role of Institutions, Interests and Ideas”, in: Technology Analysis & Strategic Management, 22,6: 649–52.
Seyfang, Gill; Smith, Adrian, 2007: “Grassroots Innovations for Sustainable Development: Towards a New Research and Policy Agenda”, in: Environmental Politics, 16,4: 584–603.
Shepherd, Anne; Ortolano, Leonard, 1997: “Organizational Change and Environmental Impact Assessment at the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand: 1972–1988”, in: Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 17,5: 329–56.
Shove, Elizabeth; Walker, Gordon, 2010: “Governing Transitions in the Sustainability of Everyday Life”, in: Research Policy, 39,4: 471–76.
Shove, Elizabeth; Walker, Gordon, 2014: “What Is Energy For? Social Practice and Energy Demand”, in: Theory, Culture & Society, 31,5: 41–58.
Siriprachai, Somboon, 2012: Industrialization with a Weak State: Thailand’s Development in Historical Perspective (Singapore and Kyoto: NUS Press in association with Kyoto University Press).
Smith, Adrian; Stirling, Andy; Berkhout, Frans, 2005: “The Governance of Sustainable Sociotechnical Transitions”, in: Research Policy, 34,10: 1491–1510.
Smith, Adrian, 2012: “Civil Society in Sustainable Energy Transitions”, in: Verbong, Geert; Loorback, Derk (Eds.), 2012: Governing the Energy Transition (London and New York: Routledge): 180–202.
Smith, Adrian; Voß, Jan-Peter; Grin, John, 2010: “Innovation Studies and Sustainability Transitions: The Allure of the Multi-Level Perspective and Its Challenges”, in: Research Policy, 39,4: 435–48.
Smith, Thomas. B., 2003: “Privatising Electric Power in Malaysia and Thailand: Politics and Infrastructure Development Policy”, in: Public Administration and Development, 23,3: 273–83.
Smits, Mattijs, 2012: “The Benefits and Complexities of Distributed Generation: Two Energy Trajectories in Laos and Thailand”, in: Forum for Development Studies, 39,2: 185–208.
Sneddon, Chris, 2003: “Reconfiguring Scale and Power: The Khong-Chi-Mun Project in Northeast Thailand”, in: Environment and Planning A, 35,12: 2229–50.
Sukkumnoed, Decharut; Greacen, Chuenchom Sangarasri; Limstit, Paisan; Bureekul, Thawilwadee; Thongplon, Sairung; Nuntavorakarn, Suphakij, 2006: Governing the Power Sector: An Assessment of Electricity Governance in Thailand (Washington DC and Pune: World Resources Institute, National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, and Prayas Energy Group).
Sulistiyanto, Priyambudi; Xun, Wu, 2004: “The Political Economy of Power Sector Restructuring in Southeast Asia”, Paper for the Conference on Regulation, Deregulation and Re-regulation in Globalizing Asia, National University of Singapore, March 22–24.
UNDP (United Nations Development Program), 2009: Human Security Today and Tomorrow: Thailand’s Human Development Report 2009 (Bangkok: United Nations Development Programme).
UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) and TEI (Thailand Environment Institute), 2007: Greater Mekong Environmental Outlook (Bangkok: United Nations Environment Program and Thailand Environment Institute (TEI)).
Verbong, Geert; Loorback, Derk, 2012: “Introduction”, in: Verbong, Geert; Loorback, Derk, 2012: Governing the Energy Transition (London and New York: Routledge): 1–23.
Victor, David G; Heller, Thomas C. (Eds.), 2007: The Political Economy of Power Sector Reform: The Experiences of Five Major Developing Countries (Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo: Cambridge University Press).
Walker, Andrew, 2012: Thailand’s Political Peasants: Power in the Modern Rural Economy. (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press).
Wattana, Supannika; Sharma, Deepak; Vaiyavuth, Ronnakorn, 2008: “Electricity Industry Reforms in Thailand: A Historical Review”, in: GMSARN International Journal 2,2: 41–52.
Williams, James H; Dubash, Navroz K., 2004: “Asian Electricity Reform in Historical Perspective”, in: Pacific Affairs, 77,3: 411–36.
Wisuttisak, Pornchai, 2012: “Regulation and Competition Issues in Thai Electricity Sector”, in: Energy Policy, 44: 185–98.
WRI (World Resources Institute), EGI (Electricty Governance Initiative), and Prayas Energy Group (n.d.): Shining a Light on Electricity Governance (Washington DC: World Resources Institute (WRI)).
Yoo, Yeji, 2013: “Renewable Energy Development and Environmental Justice in Thailand: Case Studies of Biomass Energy Projects in Roi-Et and Suphanburi Provinces” (MA dissertation, Chulalongkorn University, MA in International Development Studies Programme).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2016 Springer International Publishing Switzerland
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Middleton, C. (2016). Sustainable Electricity Transition in Thailand and the Role of Civil Society. In: Brauch, H., Oswald Spring, Ú., Grin, J., Scheffran, J. (eds) Handbook on Sustainability Transition and Sustainable Peace . Hexagon Series on Human and Environmental Security and Peace, vol 10. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43884-9_39
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43884-9_39
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-43882-5
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-43884-9
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)