Abstract

There are three strategic levels for successful energy planning in cities: 1) Integration strategy for integrating energy planning into urban planning institutions; 2) Practice strategy for developing suitable energy planning practices in urban planning institutions, and 3) Vision strategy for the creation and integration of energy visions and scenarios required for long-term decarbonisation. The vision strategy is critical but not well researched and is the focus of this article. Using Strategic Energy Planning (SEP) as an analytical framework, the vision strategy of eight forerunner European cities are analysed. Some critical elements of SEP include the use of long-term targets, holistic energy system thinking, and retention of scenarios. The results indicate that the level of understanding and practice of the vision strategy is still deficient in the cities. Cities often use the practice of urban planning, which does not fit very well with energy planning, particularly with the vision strategy. The energy planning in the cities mostly focuses on shorter-term goals and actions, and they often abandon energy scenarios once extracted. However, through trial and error, some cities are finding ways forward. The article concludes with several recommendations, particularly that cities need to see scenarios as retainable long-term servants providing information desired by the planner, rather than serving as a guide to the planner.

Highlights

  • The EU aims to be climate neutral by 2050, which is at the heart of the Green New Deal and written into the Climate Law [1]

  • Except for City A, who tentatively focuses on a long-term target-climate-neutral 2050-the other cities do not have a long-term target in mind (Table 5)

  • The main focus of the study was on how the cities create and integrate strategic visions and scenarios which are vital in the vision strategy of energy planning

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Summary

Introduction

The EU aims to be climate neutral by 2050, which is at the heart of the Green New Deal and written into the Climate Law [1]. Local initiatives in cities are important in achieving overall national and international goals since most energy technologies have a regional planning element in distributed energy systems [3]. Climate change has been a focus for cities for many years [4], addressing challenges to institutionalise it in planning practice [5,6,7]. The focus on climate change within urban planning involves Energy Planning, defined by [8] as “determining the optimal mix of energy sources to satisfy a given energy demand.”. Energy planning in the climate change context relates to the measures and actions of a city and their qualitative environmental impact and social criteria that lead to a decarbonised energy system

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