Abstract
The five Nordic countries have aggressive climate and energy policies in place and have already emerged to be leaders in renewable energy and energy efficiency. Denmark is renowned for its pioneering use of wind energy, Finland and Sweden bioenergy, Norway hydroelectricity and Iceland geothermal energy. All countries aim to be virtually “fossil free” by 2050. This study explores the Nordic energy transition through the lens of three interconnected research questions: How are they doing it? What challenges exist? And what broader lessons result for energy policy? The study firstly investigates the pathways necessary for these five countries to achieve their low-carbon goals. It argues that a concerted effort must be made to (1) promote decentralized and renewable forms of electricity supply; (2) shift to more sustainable forms of transport; (3) further improve the energy efficiency of residential and commercial buildings; and (4) adopt carbon capture and storage technologies for industry. However, the section that follows emphasizes some of the empirical barriers the Nordic transition must confront, namely political contestation, technological contingency, and social justice and recognition concerns. The study concludes with implications for what such historical progress, and future transition pathways, mean for both energy researchers and energy planners.
Highlights
This article explores the history and dynamics of the Nordic low-carbon energy transition
It has long been promoted within the academic literature as a blueprint for technological innovation and renewable energy deployment (Sovacool et al 2008; Borup et al 2008; Sovacool 2013) as well as the underlying politics and institutional dynamics behind its energy and climate policies (Westholm and Lindahl 2012; Nilsson et al 2011) and its promotion of electricity trade and interconnection (Unger and Ekvall 2003)
Each has a series of longstanding policy goals; each has binding climate targets; each are attempting to become entirely or mostly “fossil fuel free” or “carbon neutral,” with Denmark, Sweden, and Norway committed to 100% renewable energy penetration, Finland 80%, Iceland 50-75%
Summary
This article explores the history and dynamics of the Nordic low-carbon energy transition. INSERT FIGURE 2 AND 3 HERE As the rest of this section of the study indicates, the four pillars of the Nordic energy transition involve renewable electricity and heat, energy efficiency, transport, and industry.
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