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The enactment of socio-technical transition pathways: A reformulated typology and a comparative multi-level analysis of the German and UK low-carbon electricity transitions (1990–2014)

796

Citations

55

References

2016

Year

TLDR

Purpose: combine Purpose sentences: first contribution, second contribution. Also Purpose, Mechanism sentence also contains purpose. So Purpose: "This paper reformulates the Geels and Schot typology through endogenous enactment and suggests transitions can shift between pathways depending on technology and institutional struggles." Keep concise. Mechanism: combine Mechanism sentences: the Purpose, Mechanism sentence and the separate Mechanism sentence.

Abstract

This paper aims to make two contributions to the sustainability transitions literature, in particular the Geels and Schot (2007. Res. Policy 36(3), 399) transition pathways typology. First, it reformulates and differentiates the typology through the lens of endogenous enactment, identifying the main patterns for actors, formal institutions, and technologies. Second, it suggests that transitions may shift between pathways, depending on struggles over technology deployment and institutions. Both contributions are demonstrated with a comparative analysis of unfolding low-carbon electricity transitions in Germany and the UK between 1990–2014. The analysis shows that Germany is on a substitution pathway, enacted by new entrants deploying small-scale renewable electricity technologies (RETs), while the UK is on a transformation pathway, enacted by incumbent actors deploying large-scale RETs. Further analysis shows that the German transition has recently shifted from a 'stretch-and-transform' substitution pathway to a 'fit-and-conform' pathway, because of a fightback from utilities and altered institutions. It also shows that the UK transition moved from moderate to substantial incumbent reorientation, as government policies became stronger. Recent policy changes, however, substantially downscaled UK renewables support, which is likely to shift the transition back to weaker reorientation.

References

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