Data

General Issues
Environment
Planning & Development
Specific Topics
Climate Change
Alternative & Renewable Energy
Energy Conservation
Collections
OECD Project on Representative Deliberative Processes
Climate Change
Location
Edmonton
Canada
Scope of Influence
City/Town
Files
Public Deliberation on Climate Change-Lessons from Alberta Climate Dialogue_2018.pdf
Links
Lessons Learned From A Six-Year Project To Convene Influential Dialogues About Climate Change
Videos
Citizens' Panel on Edmonton's Energy and Climate Challenges
Start Date
End Date
Ongoing
No
Time Limited or Repeated?
A single, defined period of time
Purpose/Goal
Make, influence, or challenge decisions of government and public bodies
Approach
Co-governance
Consultation
Spectrum of Public Participation
Involve
Total Number of Participants
56
Open to All or Limited to Some?
Limited to Only Some Groups or Individuals
Recruitment Method for Limited Subset of Population
Stratified Random Sample
Targeted Demographics
Youth
General Types of Methods
Deliberative and dialogic process
General Types of Tools/Techniques
Recruit or select participants
Facilitate dialogue, discussion, and/or deliberation
Collect, analyse and/or solicit feedback
Specific Methods, Tools & Techniques
Citizens' Reference Panel
Citizens' Jury
Sortition
Q&A Session
Audience Response Systems (ARS)
Legality
Yes
Facilitators
Yes
Facilitator Training
Trained, Nonprofessional Facilitators
Face-to-Face, Online, or Both
Both
Types of Interaction Among Participants
Discussion, Dialogue, or Deliberation
Ask & Answer Questions
Information & Learning Resources
Expert Presentations
Video Presentations
Written Briefing Materials
Decision Methods
Voting
If Voting
Super-Majoritarian
Communication of Insights & Outcomes
Public Report
Primary Organizer/Manager
Centre for Public Involvement
Type of Organizer/Manager
Academic Institution
Local Government
Funder
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
Type of Funder
National Government
Staff
Yes
Volunteers
No
Evidence of Impact
Yes
Types of Change
Changes in public policy
Changes in how institutions operate
Implementers of Change
Elected Public Officials
Formal Evaluation
Yes
Evaluation Report Documents
Impacts of the Citizens’ Panel on Edmonton’s Energy and Climate Challenges-2015

CASE

Citizens' Panel on Edmonton’s Energy & Climate Challenges

November 14, 2020 Patrick L Scully, Participedia Team
August 4, 2020 Joyce Chen
August 9, 2019 Scott Fletcher Bowlsby
July 27, 2019 Scott Fletcher Bowlsby
July 13, 2019 Patrick L Scully, Participedia Team
July 11, 2017 geoff.salomons
May 28, 2013 geoff.salomons
General Issues
Environment
Planning & Development
Specific Topics
Climate Change
Alternative & Renewable Energy
Energy Conservation
Collections
OECD Project on Representative Deliberative Processes
Climate Change
Location
Edmonton
Canada
Scope of Influence
City/Town
Files
Public Deliberation on Climate Change-Lessons from Alberta Climate Dialogue_2018.pdf
Links
Lessons Learned From A Six-Year Project To Convene Influential Dialogues About Climate Change
Videos
Citizens' Panel on Edmonton's Energy and Climate Challenges
Start Date
End Date
Ongoing
No
Time Limited or Repeated?
A single, defined period of time
Purpose/Goal
Make, influence, or challenge decisions of government and public bodies
Approach
Co-governance
Consultation
Spectrum of Public Participation
Involve
Total Number of Participants
56
Open to All or Limited to Some?
Limited to Only Some Groups or Individuals
Recruitment Method for Limited Subset of Population
Stratified Random Sample
Targeted Demographics
Youth
General Types of Methods
Deliberative and dialogic process
General Types of Tools/Techniques
Recruit or select participants
Facilitate dialogue, discussion, and/or deliberation
Collect, analyse and/or solicit feedback
Specific Methods, Tools & Techniques
Citizens' Reference Panel
Citizens' Jury
Sortition
Q&A Session
Audience Response Systems (ARS)
Legality
Yes
Facilitators
Yes
Facilitator Training
Trained, Nonprofessional Facilitators
Face-to-Face, Online, or Both
Both
Types of Interaction Among Participants
Discussion, Dialogue, or Deliberation
Ask & Answer Questions
Information & Learning Resources
Expert Presentations
Video Presentations
Written Briefing Materials
Decision Methods
Voting
If Voting
Super-Majoritarian
Communication of Insights & Outcomes
Public Report
Primary Organizer/Manager
Centre for Public Involvement
Type of Organizer/Manager
Academic Institution
Local Government
Funder
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
Type of Funder
National Government
Staff
Yes
Volunteers
No
Evidence of Impact
Yes
Types of Change
Changes in public policy
Changes in how institutions operate
Implementers of Change
Elected Public Officials
Formal Evaluation
Yes
Evaluation Report Documents
Impacts of the Citizens’ Panel on Edmonton’s Energy and Climate Challenges-2015

A 56-member citizens' reference panel commissioned by the City of Edmonton to weigh in on the development of an energy transition plan. The recommendations of the panel were accepted by the administration and integrated into the final Energy Transition Strategy.

Note: the following entry is missing citations. Please help us verify its contents.

Problems and Purpose

From October to December, 2012, 56 Edmontonians gathered to deliberate about climate change and energy vulnerability in a municipal policy making context. The Panel worked together over six day-long sessions. The Session Reports give a day-by-day overview of main deliberation activities.

Panelists heard from City representatives, industry, and university experts, and took part in facilitated exercises to help them identify common ground. Citizens drew upon an expert-developed Energy Transition Discussion Paper in developing recommendations for the City’s consideration. At the end of the five-sessions, members were assigned specific post-panel deliverables (media requests, supply purchases, publicity, and meeting attendance, etc.) to bring the conclusions they reached in meeting to the rest of the community.

The Panel’s Final Report was completed in January 2013 and presented to City Council’s Executive Committee on April 15th, 2013.[1]

Background History and Context

In 2009 the City of Edmonton initiated a process for the long term planning and visioning of what the City would like to become by the year 2040. The result of this initial process was the creation of a number of strategic plans for distinct areas: The Way We Finance, The Way We Green, The Way We Grow, The Way We Live, The Way We Move, and The Way We Prosper.

In conjunction with the municipal development plan The Way We Green, the City commissioned a Discussion Paper by the Pembina Institute and HB Lanarc. The Edmonton Citizens' Panel was convened to evaluate the options proposed in the Discussion Paper in order to provide City Council and Administration with robust information concerning citizens' preferences and values regarding the variety of policy options proposed.

Organizing, Supporting, and Funding Entities

This panel was convened through the collaboration of the City of Edmonton's Office of Environment, the Centre for Public Involvement (CPI), and Alberta Climate Dialogue (ABCD), a SSHRC funded project at the University of Alberta led by Dr. David Kahane.

Participant Recruitment and Selection

The process to recruit 66 Citizen Panelists, led by the Centre for Public Involvement, was as follows:

1. Establish representation targets

  • ABCD, CPI, and the City developed targets for representing Edmonton’s demographic and attitudinal diversity. Targets were based on data from Statistics Canada, City of Edmonton census data, and a general population survey with questions developed by the project team in collaboration with researchers. The target size of the Panel was 55-60, and 66 people were recruited to compensate for anticipated attrition.

2. General population survey

  • An automated telephone survey of the general Edmonton population by Probit was undertaken to define baselines for the attitudinal questions in each demographic target. 1297 Edmontonians completed this general population survey.

3. Create an initial pool of prospective

  • Prospective participants were contacted through an initial automated recruitment call by Probit to random Edmontonians (total contacted: 2397). Data was gathered using survey questions (demographic and attitudinal) with phone key responses; willingness and availability to take part were also recorded. Additional telephone follow-up was completed with a pool of those who provided telephone responses (total of 317). Those willing and able to take part were asked to complete a consent form and a more detailed survey.

4. Refine and adjust the composition of the Citizens’ Panel

  • Final selection was completed to establish a Citizens’ Panel that was as representative as possible of interlocking demographic and attitudinal criteria.

5. Targeted outreach

  • Additional youth outreach was undertaken by CPI to recruit participants in the age 18-29 category.

6. Finalize Composition

  • Sixty-six Panelists were invited to participate in the 2012 Citizens’ Panel on Edmonton’s Energy and Climate Challenges. Each was provided with a participant resource package and letter of participation prior to the Panel's first session.

7. Supporting Participation

  • Weekly communications and support were provided to ensure positive and effective participation by all Panelists; Panelists also had access to an intranet site to support their overall learning and experience. Those who left the Panel early were contacted: reasons for leaving included illness, family circumstances, and work out of the city.

Methods and Tools Used

This event used the Citizens' Reference Panel methodology which is similar to a Citizens' Jury in its use of various tools of engagement including surveys, information and question and answer periods, small group deliberation (such as thematic dialogue tables or future workshops), audience response systems, and plenary discussion.

What Went On: Process, Interaction, and Participation

The process began with panelists deliberating a number of guiding principles and values they felt were important for City Council to keep in mind as it went forward with any recommendations.

The four guiding principles were:

  • Weigh costs and benefits for each energy transition action
  • Use public and transparent decision making processes so that citizens are confident that energy transition decisions serve the public good
  • Link City leadership to citizen education
  • Recognize and promote multiple reasons for energy transition

The four values were:

  • Sustainability
  • Equity
  • Quality of Life
  • Balancing individual freedom and the public good

Following this initial session, group of participants felt that the recommendations proposed in the discussion paper did not go far enough or fast enough with regards to the overall transition goals. While proposed motions did not achieve the threshold desired by the organizers to be an actual recommendation of the panel (75%), two motions did achieve more than a majority of support.

The two motions were:

  1. Speed is essential, and the Panel wants the City to set strong, measurable targets for energy transition in a five-year time frame. In other words, it is important not just that the City seek ambitious changes in energy use by 2050, but that there be aggressive short-term targets so that transition begins quickly. (Received 71% support)
  2. The ‘Low Carbon Case’ in the Discussion Paper, which the Panel as a whole supports, sets a good but minimal standard for energy transition. The City should aim to move further and faster with energy transition than outlined by the Low Carbon Case. (Received 63% support)

This represents an interesting example where a majority of the participants resisted the initial framing of the deliberation and pushed for a more radical agenda than was initially proposed.

At the last session on December 1, 2012, panelists used electronic clickers to anonymously vote on approving or rejecting the content of the Final Report draft as it stood. Lastly, the group discussed deliverables for moving forward with the proposals of the Final Report, and divided into teams to carry out these deliverables (sending press releases, engaging with media, social media, developing logos, etc.). A team leader was assigned to each group.

Media coverage occurred mainly after the Final Report had been released and was being discussed in the city government in April and May of 2013. The activities of the Citizens’ Panel were mainly participant-focused. While there was no structure programming to bring in the voice of citizens aside from the ones sitting in the room, the participants constantly engaged with each other beyond the Saturday sessions through a participant website set up through the University of Alberta portal.

Final Recommendations

The Panel concluded that the City of Edmonton does indeed need to take active measures to become a low carbon city by 2050. They came out in support of the following six deliverables as proposed in the Discussion Paper:

  • “Reduce the greenhouse gas intensity of the provincial electricity grid”
  • “Increase the proportion of development undertaken to create compact, mixed-used, transit-oriented neighborhoods within already developed areas”
  • “Reduce energy use in industrial facilities through energy efficiency”
  • “Increase the uptake of distributed energy generation”
  • “Increase the energy efficiency of buildings”
  • “Reduce the amount of gasoline and diesel used in the vehicle fleet”

The Final Report was completed in January 2013 and was presented to the City Council’s Executive Committee on April 15, 2013. The proposal received a lot of media coverage from the end of March to the end of April.

Post-panel activity on the Final Report and engagement with the city government was fueled by step-by-step deliverables designed by the panelists during the last session. The participants divided into teams dedicated to media engagement, editing, social media, and developing logos, etc. and carried out this work beyond the date of their last session.

Influence, Outcomes, and Effects

Edmonton City Council produced a report in 2015 outlining how the Citizens' Panel's recommendations had been implemented. The report states that, "The recommendations of the Discussion Paper were thoroughly vetted through the Citizens’ Panel’s deliberations, and the Energy Transition Strategy draws explicitly on the Panel’s work in two ways: First, the Strategy incorporates particular concerns raised in the Final Report of the Citizens’ Panel, especially those highlighted as “Guiding Principles”—these are included in the Strategy as Strategic Action 10.Second, in the draft Strategy itself, in how the Strategy is being framed as it goes to Council, and in many other communications, the City bases the democratic legitimacy of this complex and ambitious strategy on the fact that its key elements were strongly supported by the Citizens’ Panel."[2]

Analysis and Lessons Learned

Edmonton’s Citizens’ Panel was an effective model of deliberative democracy in terms of its pre-program foundation, post-program follow-up, and engagement of the participant pool throughout the process. Basing the “Big Question” on an already existing policy or paper gave participants a base from which to discuss high-level policy and eliminated the burden of having to design suggestions from scratch without having had prior knowledge or concern about the issue at hand. Sessions were also well-designed towards this purpose, with presentations from experts.

An Internet portal through the University of Alberta was provided to participants for discussions and crowd sourcing throughout the process, which kept panelists engaged and interested throughout the multi-month-long program. Furthermore, the Panel’s post-program deliverables made action on the proposal organized and efficient even after the conclusion of the last full group session.

Meanwhile, in any replication of this model in the future, the coordinator might consider more structured programming for gathering opinions outside the walls of the conference room through neighbor interviews assigned to each participant and/or a popular survey administered and publicized with the help of the participants. Additionally, media transparency in terms of the matters and topics discussed during the sessions did not occur until the program was over and the Final Report was presented; if possible, the coordinator might also consider allowing regular press coverage of the six sessions.

See Also

Citizens' Reference Panel

References

[1] http://sirepub.edmonton.ca/sirepub/mtgviewer.aspx?meetid=985&doctype=AGENDA

[2] City of Edmonton, 'Impacts of the Citizens' Panel on Edmonton’s Energy and Climate Challenges', March 2015, https://www.edmonton.ca/city_government/documents/Citizens_Panel_-_Impacts_2015.pdf

Hanson, Lorelei (ed), Public Deliberation on Climate Change Lessons from Alberta Climate Dialogue (AU Press, 2018)

http://sirepub.edmonton.ca/sirepub/mtgviewer.aspx?meetid=985&doctype=AGENDA

http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/edmonton-energy-transition-discussion-paper.pdf

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B52b5IuG0kSXUldKY29kUm1DTVU/edit

http://www.albertaclimatedialogue.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/ECP_EnergyClimateChallengesFINAL2.pdf

External Links

Alberta Climate Dialogue

Centre For Public Involvement

Video of Dr. David Kahane describing Alberta Climate Dialogue

Notes