ID | 177168 |
Title Proper | Transitions, disruptions and revolutions |
Other Title Information | Expert views on prospects for a smart and local energy revolution in the UK |
Language | ENG |
Author | Winskel, Mark |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Alongside ambitious targets for economy-wide decarbonisation, a ‘smart and local energy revolution’ narrative has recently emerged in energy policy and research. To consider the energy revolution proposition, this paper presents findings from a Policy Delphi survey of interdisciplinary energy researchers and stakeholders (n = 113) on alternative transition paths (disruptive or continuity-led) for the UK energy system. The paper includes quantitative and qualitative survey findings on a number of social and technical aspects of the energy revolution proposition: system governance, security and flexibility arrangements, power sector decarbonisation, the future of large supply firms and energy policy priorities. The results suggest that rather than a wholesale revolution the UK's energy transition over the next two decades will involve a mix of disruptive and continuity-led elements. Experts differ on a number of issues associated with the energy revolution proposition, including the impact of demand side response on whole system flexibility and whether energy systems are best governed at a local or national scale. However, rather than having fixed orientations to either disruption or continuity-led change, most experts respond on an issue-by-issue basis. The energy revolution proposition is socially constructed and contestable, and whole energy systems policy and research should go beyond uniform transition narratives. |
`In' analytical Note | Energy Policy Vol.147; Dec 2020 : p.111815 |
Journal Source | Energy Policy 2020-12 147 |
Key Words | Delphi ; Energy Revolution ; Local Policy ; Disruption ; Whole System Transition ; Smart |