Litcius/Paper detail

Opposing Energy Transitions: Modeling the Contested Nature of Energy Transitions in the Electricity Sector

Christoph H. Stefes

2020Review of Policy Research32 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Energy transitions are fiercely contested. The incumbents of the fossil‐ and nuclear‐based energy systems have much to lose from a transition to a sustainable and decentralized energy system. They therefore employ their material and political resources to reverse, halt, or slow down this transition. They also attempt to stop and reverse the decentralization of energy production. This article provides a framework that can be used to analyze the contestation that surrounds energy transitions. The analytical framework breaks apart the macro paths of energy transitions, and differentiates between three meso‐paths (political, economic‐technological, and legitimation), emphasizes the feedback processes between these paths, and acknowledges the crucial role that actors play in engendering these feedback processes. It uses Germany as a case study to illustrate the analytical model. It also provides hypotheses that will be tested in the subsequent contributions to this special issue.

Topics & Concepts

Energy transitionLegitimationPoliticsEnergy (signal processing)DecentralizationEconomic systemElectricityTransition (genetics)MacroEnergy systemEconomicsPolitical economyPolitical scienceBusinessEnvironmental economicsMarket economyComputer sciencePhysicsLawGeneBiochemistryPathologyQuantum mechanicsProgramming languagePanacea (medicine)MedicineChemistryAlternative medicineSustainability and Climate Change GovernanceIntegrated Energy Systems OptimizationSocial Acceptance of Renewable Energy