Ideologies in Energy Transition : Community Discourses on Renewables
Berg, Petra; Narayan, Rumy; Rajala, Arto (2021-10-01)
Berg, Petra
Narayan, Rumy
Rajala, Arto
Talent First Network
01.10.2021
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021113057861
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021113057861
Kuvaus
vertaisarvioitu
©2021 The Authors. Published by Talent First Network 2007–2021 and published in the Technology Innovation Management Review. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
We want to thank the following institutions and projects for financial support: University of Vaasa, School of Marketing and Communication, and VEBIC (Vaasa Energy Business Innovation Center) research platform; South Ostrobothnia Regional Fund of the Finnish Cultural Foundation; Business Finland, FLEXIMAR (Novel marketplace for energy flexibility) and SolarX (Maximizing PV integration capacity in energy and power systems) projects; European Regional Development Fund, ESSR (Energy Self-Sufficient Regions) project; and the Foundation for Economic Education, PETs (Pathways to Energy Transitions) project.
©2021 The Authors. Published by Talent First Network 2007–2021 and published in the Technology Innovation Management Review. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
We want to thank the following institutions and projects for financial support: University of Vaasa, School of Marketing and Communication, and VEBIC (Vaasa Energy Business Innovation Center) research platform; South Ostrobothnia Regional Fund of the Finnish Cultural Foundation; Business Finland, FLEXIMAR (Novel marketplace for energy flexibility) and SolarX (Maximizing PV integration capacity in energy and power systems) projects; European Regional Development Fund, ESSR (Energy Self-Sufficient Regions) project; and the Foundation for Economic Education, PETs (Pathways to Energy Transitions) project.
Tiivistelmä
This paper examines discourses in five Finnish municipalities' energy transition processes to identify and explain different ideological discourses among its members. The study fills a gap in research extending the idea of sense making to capture the ideologies that hide in discourses during socio-technical transitions. We identify three types of ideological discourses labelled as Clan, Solarpunk and Native. The implications of the ideologies embedded in municipal, multi-partner networks that participate in energy transition affect who will be heard in a local context. This impacts future choices directly related to sustainability outcomes. We propose that discourses in these multi-partner networks, conceptualized from the perspective of municipal energy systems, help us to uncover underlying ideologies that imperil change. And yet at the same time, these revelations offer opportunities for sustainability-oriented innovation.
Kokoelmat
- Artikkelit [2330]