Five cities, five countries, one ambition

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Five cities, five countries, one ambition

The Dutch Research Institute for Transitions takes us through their transitions management approach to achieving transformative sustainability initiatives, based on their recent experiences with five cities around the world. Representing Scotland was Aberdeen City Council, who undertook a school energy efficiency project and the 'Celebrate the Street' initiative, as well as numerous other projects.

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So what’s the potential of renewables, anyway? (Part 01)

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So what’s the potential of renewables, anyway? (Part 01)

My colleagues are going to hate me for posting this, but ... well, I'm not Elon Musk*, okay? So here's a bit of a beginnings for constraints on the future of renewables. And when I say 'beginnings' I mean 'beginnings'! If one wants to do this properly one needs to start with so-called 'boundary conditions' and work inwards from there.

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From transitions to Big Transitions, from science to scientivism, and from dynamics to agency

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From transitions to Big Transitions, from science to scientivism, and from dynamics to agency

An approachable bunch of theorists, empiricists, and some practitioners from various fields convened at the 5th International Sustainability Transitions Conference in Utrecht, the Netherlands. Most of the influential thinkers in the field were there, partaking in a carefully designed programme that centered on developments at the fringes of the fields of ‘sustainability transitions’ and ‘technology innovation systems’ research. The programme was a testament to just how much has happened in the last decade since transitions theory was first introduced as a theory of socio-technical change. 

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Institutions, the Self and renewable energy in rural Cameroon

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Institutions, the Self and renewable energy in rural Cameroon

We have just returned from Adamawa, Central Northern Cameroon, where we had the opportunity to see first-hand the challenges and opportunities of domestic biogas as a means of providing clean and low-cost energy to remote, off-grid and low income areas. What was most interesting about this visit was to see the motivations for people to engage in renewable energy projects, and the barriers to ownership, compared to those in Europe. This opinion piece looks at the crux of the matter: the often underestimated role of social institutions, and a deep-rooted lack of trust in environments with weak or absent market institutions.  

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One cheer for the Government's community energy strategy

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One cheer for the Government's community energy strategy

The Government has launched a discussion document aimed at ensuring that local people have the opportunity to gain shares or income from renewable energy developments, but in typically British centralising fashion it is ironic that this discussion seems to focussed on what the electricity majors want or are prepared to allow. 

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