| Literature DB >> 32375583 |
Benjamin K Sovacool1,2, Noam Bergman1, Debbie Hopkins3, Kirsten Eh Jenkins4, Sabine Hielscher1, Andreas Goldthau5, Brent Brossmann6.
Abstract
Based on an extensive synthesis of semi-structured interviews, media content analysis, and reviews, this article conducts a qualitative meta-analysis of more than 560 sources of evidence to identify 38 visions associated with seven different low-carbon innovations - automated mobility, electric vehicles, smart meters, nuclear power, shale gas, hydrogen, and the fossil fuel divestment movement - playing a key role in current deliberations about mobility or low-carbon energy supply and use. From this material, it analyzes such visions based on rhetorical features such as common problems and functions, storylines, discursive struggles, and rhetorical effectiveness. It also analyzes visions based on typologies or degrees of valence (utopian vs. dystopian), temporality (proximal vs. distant), and radicalism (incremental vs. transformative). The article is motivated by the premise that tackling climate change via low-carbon energy systems (and practices) is one of the most significant challenges of the twenty-first century, and that effective decarbonization will require not only new energy technologies, but also new ways of understanding language, visions, and discursive politics surrounding emerging innovations and transitions.Entities:
Keywords: energy discourse; futures; imaginaries; sociotechnical transitions; visions
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32375583 PMCID: PMC7399846 DOI: 10.1177/0306312720915283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Stud Sci ISSN: 0306-3127 Impact factor: 3.885
Key terms used in this study.
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Vision | A description of what could occur in the near-term, mid-term, or long-term future. While shaped by ideological constraints, visions reveal alternative narratives or futures, thus inviting contestation within themselves, and between alternative perspectives |
| Fantasy | A narrative that dramatizes a vision, making it salient to audiences through dramatic devices and/or recurring themes |
| Ideograph | A term of cultural and political collective commitment that embraces historical norms sufficiently to guide subsequent discourse. |
| Cues | Key words or phrases that resonate symbolically with particular audiences. |
Summary of technological case studies and methods for this meta-analysis.
| Innovation | Method of data collection | Country focus | Number of documents or statements collected (N) | More details in: |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (a) Automated mobility | Content analysis of freight industry and mass media documents | Global | 107 | |
| (b) Battery electric vehicles | Content analysis of major scenarios and forecasts about electric vehicles and low-carbon vehicles | United Kingdom | 16 | |
| (c) Smart meters | Content analysis of broadsheet and tabloid newspaper articles | United Kingdom | 205 | |
| (d) Nuclear power | Research interviews | United Kingdom | 36 | - |
| (e) Shale gas fracking | Research interviews | Eastern Europe | 74 | |
| (f) Hydrogen | Content analysis of project documents and public media (52) and interviews (62) | United States | 114 |
|
| (g) Divestment | Research interviews | Global | 12 |
|
Refers to material collected through the duration of a five-year research effort known as the Centre on Innovation and Energy Demand.
Recurring dimensions, problems and ideographs in low-carbon visions.
| Dimension | Examples | Illustrative problems (and possible cues) | Ideographs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Technological and scientific | Effortless freight (automated vehicles), transformers (automated vehicles), a perilous distraction (automated vehicles), the electric society (electric vehicles), technological disappointment (electric vehicles), future smart innovation (smart meters), costly disaster (smart meters), costly mistake (hydrogen) | Traffic congestion, road accidents, phlegmatic innovation patterns, inferior performance, prohibitive costs | Progress and innovation, efficiency, resistance |
| Socioeconomic | The educated trucker (automated vehicles), entrenched automobility (automated vehicles and electric vehicles), infrastructural overhaul (automated vehicles), mass unemployment (automated vehicles), a revitalized economy (electric vehicles), economic prosperity (nuclear), advanced nuclear skills (nuclear), financial maelstrom (nuclear), empowerment of economic opportunity (shale gas), the carbon bubble (divestment) | Lack of skills, unemployment, globalization and protectionism, economic recession, unstable financial markets | Profit and economic growth, employment, education |
| Environmental | The decarbonized grid (electric vehicles), the low-carbon grid (smart meters), nuclear seagulls and kids (nuclear), driver of decarbonization (shale gas), environmental blight (shale gas), the ubiquitous and clean hydrogen economy (hydrogen), climatic disaster (hydrogen), climatic imperative (divestment) | Climate change, degradation of water quality, air pollution, radioactive waste | Environmental sustainability, safety |
| Security | The reluctant and anxious consumer (electric vehicles), hacked and vulnerable grid (smart meters), families in turmoil (smart meters), weapons that end the world (nuclear), enhancer of energy security (shale gas) | Resource scarcity, household vulnerability, military strength, arms races, geopolitical instability | Safety, privacy, security, resistance |
| Political | Empowered consumers (smart meters), energy authoritarianism and exploitation (shale gas), patriotic energy independence (hydrogen), energy democratization (hydrogen), democratic transformation (divestment), fiduciary duty (divestment) | Illiberal values, populism, energy dependence, corruption | Liberty and autonomy, duty and responsibility, resistance |
Figure 1.Heroes, villains, beneficiaries, and victims in low-carbon visions.
Utopian and dystopian valence of 38 low-carbon visions.
| Innovation | Visions | |
|---|---|---|
| Positive and utopian | Negative and dystopian | |
| Automated vehicles | Effortless freight, the educated trucker, transformers | Entrenched automobility, a perilous distraction, infrastructural overhaul, mass unemployment |
| Electric vehicles | Entrenched automobility, the electric society, the decarbonized grid, a revitalized economy | The anxious and reluctant consumer, technological disappointment |
| Smart meters | Empowered consumers, the low-carbon grid, future smart innovation | Costly disaster, hacked and vulnerable grid, families in turmoil |
| Nuclear power | Economic prosperity, advanced nuclear skills | Weapons that end the world, nuclear seagulls and kids, financial maelstrom |
| Shale gas | Empowerment of economic opportunity, enhancer of energy security, driver of decarbonization | Environmental blight, energy authoritarianism and exploitation |
| Hydrogen | Patriotic energy independence, the ubiquitous and clean hydrogen economy, energy democratization | Climatic disaster, costly mistake |
| Fossil fuel divestment | Climatic imperative, democratic transformation | Fiduciary duty, the carbon bubble |
Proximal and distant temporality of 38 low-carbon visions.
| Innovation | Visions | |
|---|---|---|
| Proximal (within the next decade) | Distant (within at least a decade) | |
| Automated vehicles | Effortless freight, the educated trucker, a perilous distraction | Entrenched automobility, Transformers, mass unemployment, infrastructural overhaul |
| Electric vehicles | Entrenched automobility, the reluctant and anxious consumer | The electric society, the decarbonized grid, a revitalized economy, technological disappointment |
| Smart meters | Empowered consumers, families in turmoil, hacked and vulnerable grid | Future smart innovation, low-carbon grid, costly disaster |
| Nuclear power | Weapons that end the world, nuclear seagulls and kids | Economic prosperity, advanced nuclear skills, financial maelstrom |
| Shale gas | Empowerment of economic opportunity, energy authoritarianism, environmental blight | Enhancer of environmental security, driver of decarbonization |
| Hydrogen | Climatic disaster, costly mistake | Patriotic energy independence, the ubiquitous and clean hydrogen economy, energy democratization |
| Fossil fuel divestment | Fiduciary duty, climatic imperative, the carbon bubble, democratic transformation | |
Incremental and transformative dimensions of 38 low-carbon visions.
| Innovation | Visions | |
|---|---|---|
| Incremental or protective | Transformative or disruptive | |
| Automated vehicles | Effortless freight, the educated trucker, entrenched automobility, a perilous distraction | Transformers, infrastructural overhaul, mass unemployment |
| Electric vehicles | Entrenched automobility, the reluctant and anxious consumer, technological disappointment | The electric society, the decarbonized grid, a revitalized economy |
| Smart meters | Empowered consumers, costly disaster, families in turmoil | Future smart innovation, low-carbon grid, hacked and vulnerable grid |
| Nuclear power | Economic prosperity, advanced nuclear skills | Weapons that end the world, nuclear seagulls and kids, financial maelstrom |
| Shale gas | Empowerment of economic opportunity, enhancer of energy security, energy authoritarianism | Driver of decarbonization, environmental blight |
| Hydrogen | Patriotic energy independence, climatic disaster, costly mistake | Ubiquitous and clean hydrogen economy, energy democratization |
| Fossil fuel divestment | Fiduciary duty | Climatic imperative, the carbon bubble, democratic transformation |