6533b838fe1ef96bd12a52e1
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Understanding the scaling-up of community energy niches through Strategic Niche Management Theory: insights from Finland
Mari MartiskainenSalvatore RuggieroTiina Onkilasubject
TypologyCivil societyuusiutuvat energialähteetProcess (engineering)020209 energyStrategy and ManagementEnergy (esotericism)Nicheta1172Context (language use)02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesHM01 natural sciencesIndustrial and Manufacturing Engineeringcommunity energy0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringta517Economic geographyrenewable energy sources0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceEcological nicheenergiata511Renewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementscaling-upRenewable energystrategic niche managementnichecommunities (groups)yhdyskunnatbusinessenergydescription
The growing phenomenon of civil society involvement in renewable energy generation has attracted researchers’ interest. However, rather little is known of how a diverse and relatively small sector such as community energy could scale up and promote a change in energy production. We examine this issue through the lens of Strategic Niche Management (SNM) and conceptualize community energy as a socio-technical niche that holds the potential to promote a transition to renewable energy. Drawing on interview data with members of community energy projects and experts in Finland, we identify different types of community energy projects and the factors that may prevent them from scaling up. The study contributes a typology of community energy projects by showing which initiatives could be more inclined to be part of a strategy aiming at scaling up the sector. It also shows the tensions of SNM in the context of non-market-driven innovation, highlighting how exogenous factors such as cultural aspects, the specific context in which community energy develops and the characteristics of community groups are also relevant in the scaling-up process. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018-01-01 |