http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214629615301055

Energy Research & Social Science

April 2016, Vol.14:13–21, doi:10.1016/j.erss.2015.12.023

Seeing forests as fuel: How conflicting narratives have shaped woody
biomass energy development in the United States since the 1970s
Sarah Mittlefehldt

This article provides an historical analysis of arguments for and against
using forests for fuel since the 1970s energy crises, and explores the
relationship between public narratives and the implementation of renewable
energy technologies. I argue that different ideas about the use of forest
resources created narrative conflict between stakeholder groups, and this
conflict influenced the development of biomass energy systems by limiting
private investment and shaping public policy. Promoters and opponents of
forest fuels both worked to achieve political goals as well as economic and
environmental ones, and debates about biomass energy reflected these
different views. Although this paper focuses on public perceptions about
wood energy in the US, biomass advocacy in the US was influenced by efforts
in other countries, particularly by innovation in Sweden and Finland. By
providing an historical investigation of the cultural barriers to
developing decentralized renewable energy systems in the US, and explaining
how this experience compared with biomass development in other countries,
this research demonstrates how conflicting narratives have shaped energy
and environmental policy since the 1970s. This historical perspective
contains valuable lessons about how different social groups’ values and
beliefs have affected – and continue to affect – decisions about new energy
technologies.

Keywords
Historical perspectiveBiomass/wood energyConflicting narrativesLand
management

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