"This is a riveting and comprehensive account of a breakneck lower-carbon energy transition from a preeminent solar scholar. An indispensable tome for anyone passionate about the equity dimensions of climate change mitigation." Ryan Stock, Northern Michigan University Through brilliant analysis of Portugals pioneering rollout of solar power, leading energy scholar Siddharth Sareen illuminates why a global energy transition must provide justice as well as joules and how it can. James McCarthy, Clark University This book is well worth reading for people wishing to understand the impediments to a transition to sustainable energy generation. Recommended for those studying the realities of renewable electrical generation. Choice "In The Sun also Rises in Portugal, Siddharth Sareen brings us on an in-depth examination of the political economy underlying the transformation of Portugal to a solar powered economy. This research describes changes to Portugals countryside from one dominated by locally treasured cork oak forests to an emerging solar energy landscape. He carefully situates these tensions alongside efforts to generate solar power from the rooftops of sustainable cities, or under alternative modes of governance and ownership, showing us the multiple imaginaries competing to generate future supplies of clean energy. This pathbreaking work offers readers a rigorous research design, rich empirical fieldwork, and thoughtful analysis to tell us a story that will increasingly sound familiar around the world as the global solar energy transition carries forward. This book should be read by anyone interested in a future of solar centered around justice and sustainability." Dustin Mulvaney, San José State University
"While countries across the world struggle to meet decarbonization targets, Portugal closed its last coal thermal plant years ahead of schedule thanks in large part to the rise of solar power. Sareens book is a brilliant study of the radical possibilities of solar futures as well as what impedes a socially just and ecologically sustainable energy transition. He argues for the embrace of community solar as an antidote to the extractivist logics of grid scale energy that currently guide decarbonization in Portugal and elsewhere." Dominic Boyer, Rice University