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The Great Reconfiguration: A Socio-Technical Analysis of Low-Carbon Transitions in UK Electricity, Heat, and Mobility Systems

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Great Reconfiguration: A Socio-Technical Analysis of Low-Carbon Transitions in UK Electricity, Heat, and Mobility Systems
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Frank W. Geels
By (author) Bruno Turnheim
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:400
Dimensions(mm): Height 244,Width 170
Category/GenreEnvironmental economics
Global warming
Alternative and renewable energy sources and technology
ISBN/Barcode 9781009198240
ClassificationsDewey:333.70941
Audience
General
Illustrations Worked examples or Exercises

Publishing Details

Publisher Cambridge University Press
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publication Date 12 May 2022
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

This book is intended for researchers, policymakers, and practitioners interested in the dynamics and governance of low-carbon transitions. Drawing on the Multi-Level Perspective, it develops a whole system reconfiguration approach that explains how the incorporation of multiple innovations can cumulatively reconfigure existing systems. The book focuses on UK electricity, heat, and mobility systems, and it systematically analyses interactions between radical niche-innovations and existing (sub)systems across techno-economic, policy, and actor dimensions in the past three decades. Comparative analysis explains why the unfolding low-carbon transitions in these three systems vary in speed, scope, and depth. It evaluates to what degree these transitions qualify as Great Reconfigurations and assesses the future potential for, and barriers to, deeper low-carbon system transitions. Generalising across these systems, broader lessons are developed about the roles of incumbent firms, governance and politics, user engagement, wider public, and civil society organisations. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Author Biography

Frank W. Geels is Professor of System Innovation and Sustainability at the University of Manchester and a world-leading scholar on socio-technical system transitions. He has published six books and more than 80 peer-reviewed articles, and he was selected in the list of Highly Cited Researchers. He is a lead author of the Working Group III contribution to the 2022 IPCC Sixth Assessment Report, a member of the Scientific Committee of the European Environment Agency, and a member of the World Economic Forum's Global Future Council on the New Agenda for Economic Growth and Recovery. Bruno Turnheim is a permanent research scientist at the French National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment (INRAE), based at the Interdisciplinary Laboratory for Science, Innovation and Society (LISIS), Gustave Eiffel University. His research focuses on socio-technical transitions, notably processes of destabilisation and experimentation. He currently leads the WAYS-OUT project on the governance of socio-technical destabilisation pathways and phase-out strategies in the context of climate governance.

Reviews

'One of the most exciting additions to sustainability science over the last decade has come from the vibrant community of researchers exploring historical transitions in socio-technical systems. In The Great Reconfiguration, two leaders of that community offer a lucid summary and extension of the relevant theory, use that theory to explain the complex co-evolution of today's interlinked production-consumption systems, and conclude with practical guidance for the interventions to promote more sustainable development pathways to the future.' William C. Clark, Harvard University 'To protect the climate the world needs a massive transformation in its energy system. Policy makers and scholars need reliable guides from history for how those transformations can occur. Here is that guide-a book steeped in rich detail about how the world really works along with a fresh look at the big picture of how transformations come from interlocking technological and social processes.' David Victor, University of California, San Diego 'One of the most analytically rich and robust assessments of low-carbon transitions I have ever seen, with an excellent application to various sectors in the United Kingdom. The comparative treatment of heat, electricity, and mobility is compelling and apt, the connections to broader issues of climate governance or system reconfiguration strong. Ground-breaking in its conceptualising but down-to-earth in its policy implications, I recommend this for students and professional researchers alike.' Benjamin K. Sovacool, University of Sussex 'Now that most people agree that climate change is a real problem, the big debate is about how to solve it, and whether this demands marginal reforms to the economy, a wholesale revolution of industrial and capitalist society, or something lying between these two extremes. Relying on extensive empirical research, Geels and Turnheim convincingly map out a viable middle path - the reconfiguration of key production-consumption systems - that is already beginning to achieve the emissions reductions we need, while being politically pragmatic and feasible.' Tony Patt, ETH Zurich 'A rapid reconfiguration of large parts of the global economy is now essential for our survival. Geels and Turnheim look deeply into how such change can happen, what holds it back, and how we can speed it up. An essential guide.' Simon Sharpe, Director of Economics for the United Nations Climate Action Champions 'In many of the energy policy fields, technological and market-oriented fixes dominate both thinking and program design. Sustainability transitions research has helped to remove the tunnel vision of those frameworks to see the complex web of sociotechnical relationships. Within the field of sustainability transitions research, the multilevel perspective of Geels, Turnheim, and colleagues is arguably the most influential approach. The Great Reconfiguration shows how taking into account the complex relationships among actors, technologies, and governance can help to identify opportunities for change that would otherwise be overlooked. This book is the definitive statement of the new developments in the multilevel systems approach and its contribution to transition policy research.' David J. Hess, Vanderbilt University 'Geels and Turnheim are to be congratulated on an impressive volume that offers remarkable insight into the progress made in decarbonizing the electricity, heat, and mobility systems in the UK over the past three decades. The book's strength lies in its comprehensive analysis of system realignment within and across these three crucial domains. And it is a testament to the advances which have been made by contemporary transition scholarship over the last decade. It will interest both researchers and practitioners and reveals the power and analytical sweep of contemporary transition scholarship. James Meadowcroft, Carleton University 'This book clearly shows the power of sustainability transition research for identifying ways to mitigate the climate crisis. It advances a new and important agenda through its focus on how multiple innovations reconfigure several systems. It pairs an excellent theoretical framing with rich and well-structured empirical cases. A must read for anyone interested to understand how sustainability transitions happen.' Johan Schot, Utrecht University 'This is a great book. Not only does it bring together two leading scholars from complementary disciplines into a rich synthesis. It applies their combined insights to a practical study of low carbon transitions, of different sectors in the UK, and their very different stages. As such, it has a very practical foundation and focus which is often lacking in academic books, and combines its theoretical insights to justify the title: it, indeed, illuminates The Great Reconfiguration.' Michael Grubb, University College London 'In the last two decades, research on transitions has blossomed, enabling academics across the world to work together more effectively. In this impressive new book, two of the leading exponents of transitions thinking assemble a wealth of empirical material to reconfigure the academic state of the art with the laudable aim of positively impacting public policy. It is 'big' social science at its best.' Andrew Jordan, Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research