4 research outputs found
Best Management Practices for Sustainability in a Small-scale Community Renewable Energy: Sathya Sai School, Thailand
Organizations working towards standardization have defined universal standards for Best Management Practices (BMPs) for renewable energy (RE) projects. However, these universal standards are better suited to large-scale than small-scale projects such as community renewable energy (CRE) projects. Methods used by CRE projects to achieve BMP status remain to be determined. This paper aims to present various aspects of BMPs for small-scale CRE projects by emphasizing practices that are unrestricted, simple, and adaptable to the surrounding environment, and that will eventually lead to sustainability in the community. The case study involves RE projects at the ‘Sathya Sai School Thailand,’ an education-based community which has a community-like organizational management. The community implements CRE projects for educational-awareness program and to serve their energy needs, starting with micro scale in the community which then will impact on the reduction of climate change crisis at global level. The methodologies used for initial assessment of the involvement of residents and stakeholders, attitude of residents towards CRE project management, and attitudes towards the benefits of CRE project management included (1) field research (i.e., field observations and key-person interviews) and (2) a preference questionnaire. The results identify strengths and weaknesses of CRE project management, and are used to evaluate whether CRE project management constitutes a BMPs by using ‘The scale and sustainability score sheet’ tool. Moreover, recommendations for CRE projects to achieve BMPs status for sustainable community RE are generated from synthesis of sustainability ratings of CRE project management and integration of BMPs theory with the gaps and weaknesses of CRE project management. In conclusion, solutions focus on ‘actual problem-based solving approach’, understanding CRE project management problems and sustained practices by community residents are at the core of BMPs. Experiences can be shared by exchanging RE knowledge among academic and professional networks, and this exchange may improve the suitability of REs in relation to dynamic changes in environmental conditions
Living with Inundation and Dehydration : Comparison of the Adaptive Landscape in the Chao Phraya and the Bangpakong River Deltas
This paper compares the research outcomes regarding the two river deltas in the central part of Thailand: the Chao Phraya River - CPR and the Bangpakong River - BPR. The most common feature of the river deltas in this region is an ecosystem landscape that fluxuates throughout the year. These river dynamics are known as the pulse flow, which influences the way of life of riverfront communities and agriculture. The pulse differences are high and low in magnitude on the scale of a day, a lunar calendar month, annual seasons, a century, or even a longer period. The objectives of this study are to understand how people's lives are affected by water to understand the dynamics of nature when living under different circumstances, such as inundation or dehydration. Primary data from prior observations and field surveys of the two rivers are analyzed and the recent impacts from anthropocentrism, including using waterways as sewage channels for decades, are assessed to seek connections with nature and other forms of life. The conclusion leads to the understanding of the transboundary nature in multidisciplinary research and holistic approaches to integrate bioengineering and local wisdom into planning and design, which will offer the most efficient instruments for sustaining water-front development and transition into the coming of a new epoch of ecological naturalism