The desirability of transitions in demand: Incorporating behavioural and societal transformations into energy modelling
Authors/Creators
- 1. Energy Policy Unit, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Iroon Politechniou 9, 157 80 Athens, Greece
- 2. TU Delft, Multi-Actor Systems Department, Building 31, Jaffalaan 5, 2628 BX Delft, Netherlands
- 3. Basque Centre for Climate Change, Edificio Sede 1-1, Parque Científico de UPV/EHU, 48940 Leioa, Spain
- 4. Imperial College London, Grantham Institute, SW7 2AZ, London, United Kingdom
- 5. University of Groningen, Department of Spatial Planning and Environment, Landleven 1, 9747 AD Groningen, Netherlands
- 6. ETH Zürich, Transdisciplinarity Lab - Department of Environmental Systems Science, Universitätstrasse 16, CHN K76.2, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland
Description
Quantitative systems modelling in support of climate policy has tended to focus more on the supply side in assessing interactions among technology, economy, environment, policy and society. By contrast, the demand side is usually underrepresented, often emphasising technological options for energy efficiency improvements. In this perspective, we argue that scientific support to climate action is not only about exploring capacity of “what”, in terms of policy and outcome, but also about assessing feasibility and desirability, in terms of “when”, “where” and especially for “whom”. Without the necessary behavioural and societal transformations, the world faces an inadequate response to the climate crisis challenge. This could result from poor uptake of low-carbon technologies, continued high-carbon intensive lifestyles, or economy-wide rebound effects. For this reason, we propose a framing for a holistic and transdisciplinary perspective on the role of human choices and behaviours in influencing the low-carbon transition, starting from the desires of individuals and communities, and analysing how these interact with the energy and economic landscape, leading to systemic change at the macro-level. In making a case for a political ecology agenda, we expand our scope, from comprehending the role of societal acceptance and uptake of end-use technologies, to co-developing knowledge with citizens from non-mainstream and marginalised communities, and to defining the modelling requirements to assess the decarbonisation potential of shifting lifestyle patterns in climate change and action.
Files
Nikas et al. (2020) ERSS.pdf
Files
(1.3 MB)
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