Abstract

AbstractTransformations of the energy system are unfolding in China at an unprecedented scale and pace. The dynamics of China's energy transitions impact global trends of energy decarbonisation. Transition theories within the Anglophone academic tradition have been used to examine this process, but they tend to misrepresent the social, cultural, and political structures that shape energy transitions in China. This paper proposes a move from an analysis of energy transitions “with Chinese characteristics” to alternative thinking on energy transitions truly rooted in Chinese epistemological and philosophical constructs. The correlative epistemology refers to a Chinese tradition of social studies that describes the cosmos as a structured order of relations (guanxi). This tradition sees guanxi as the fundamental constituent of Chinese society. Such a relational focus enables a culture‐led reading of China's energy transitions, thus responding to calls for transition theories “from elsewhere.” In particular, correlative interpretations of innovation and transition processes in China frame energy transitions within broader societal transformations, define the operation of transition governance, and reveal that pre‐existing guanxi networks shape the activities of actors in transition processes.

Highlights

  • In September 2020, Xi Jinping, President of the People's Republic of China (PRC), surprised an audience of world leaders at the virtual United Nations General Assembly by pledging that the country would become carbon neutral before 2060 (Mallapaty, 2020)

  • With its sizeable scholarly community, China offers opportunities to examine the application of dominant frameworks and to unearth alternative perspectives that emerge from deeply seated scholarship on critical social sciences. We present this argument in three steps: an outline of the spatial dimensions of China's energy transition considering available empirical evidence, a synthesis of the analysis of energy transitions with dominant theoretical frameworks, and the characterisation of an alternative response grounded on Chinese social sciences scholarship

  • China constitutes a key piece of the global renewable energy mosaic, and what happens in China will be globally relevant and influential

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Summary

REGULAR PAPER

A culture‐led approach to understanding energy transitions in China: The correlative epistemology. Transition theories within the Anglophone academic tradition have been used to examine this process, but they tend to misrepresent the social, cultural, and political structures that shape energy transitions in China. The correlative epistemology refers to a Chinese tradition of social studies that describes the cosmos as a structured order of relations (guanxi). This tradition sees guanxi as the fundamental constituent of Chinese society. Such a relational focus enables a culture‐led reading of China's energy transitions, responding to calls for transition theories “from elsewhere.”. KEYWORDS China, correlative epistemology, energy transitions, guanxi, transition theory

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