Concept
What are sustainability transitions?
Sustainability transitions involve conflicts (innovation and decline, winners and losers)
Transitions are processes with long time-spans
The interplay of different technologies
Transitions include technological, political, and organizational dimensions
Example:
Energy transition: Replacement of fossil fuels and nuclear energy by renewable energy
Objectives: Addressing cliamte change as well as reducing air pollution and facilitating access to electricity
Sustainability Transitions
Pre-development phase:
Stable situation, no changes
Sustainability problems emerge without being addressed
Take- off phase:
Renewable energy transitions starts in 1990
Early diffusion of biomass, wind, and solar
Established technologies are still stable
Acceleration phase:
New technologies pick up and the use of established technologies decline
Transition comes with new challenges such as the integration of various energy sources
New technologies such as battery storage or new transmission lines are required
Systems Perspective
Researchers highlight the importance of the systems perspective for transitions
They analyze the transitions in a socio-technological system due to two reasons:
Interdependency: None of the dimensions can develop autonomously, they are all interconnected. Thus, they have to be analyzed in a systematic way instead of just looking at disaggregated components
Difficulty: The systems perspective explains the difficulty to accomplish transitions. Established elements reinforce the already existing system.
Zuletzt geändertvor einem Jahr