Abstract

ABSTRACTEnergy policies increasingly rely on market instruments to meet societal objectives for climate change mitigation. We explore the application of such instruments in low carbon heat markets. Using a conceptual framework derived from actor network theory and economic sociology, we examine the role of technical-economic models as market devices in two heat network proposals in British cities. Government intermediaries relied on the models to enact the mutual financial and carbon benefits of an area-wide heat market, and to enrol multiple public sector organisations in innovation. In practice, the models produced the opposite response: parties synthesised the modelled cost–benefit calculations into the existing public services market agencement and translated the model numbers ino opportunities to secure competitive advantage for their own organisation. These activities undermined the projected cost and carbon saving logic of the collective actor solution. The findings demonstrate the potent economic agency of market-emulating public finance and competitive procurement instruments in governing such organisational decisions, and indicate the limited traction of a low carbon calculus, which lacked significant political or senior management sponsorship. Questions are posed about the formatting of economic agency suited to securing the common goods of a sustainable society.

Highlights

  • Rather than pick a winning technology, the Government will create markets that enable competing low carbon technologies to win the largest market share as the pace of change accelerates in the 2020s UK Carbon Plan, 2011, p12.Advanced capitalist societies depend fundamentally on coal, oil and gas, but this dependence is producing increasingly severe societal risks from climate change

  • Using a conceptual framework derived from actor network theory and economic sociology, we examine the role of technical-economic models as market devices in two heat network proposals in British cities

  • Political-economic commitments to markets as means to solve societal problems pose important questions about the scope for their re-design to coordinate the urgent mitigation of climate change (Blunden & Arndt 2016)

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Summary

Introduction

Rather than pick a winning technology, the Government will create markets that enable competing low carbon technologies to win the largest market share as the pace of change accelerates in the 2020s UK Carbon Plan, 2011, p12.Advanced capitalist societies depend fundamentally on coal, oil and gas, but this dependence is producing increasingly severe societal risks from climate change. We used this approach to study two experiments in assembling a heat market, focusing on the interaction of public sector organisations, envisaged in policy as ‘market players’, with technical-economic models intended by government intermediaries to work as devices to establish new facts about the energy, cost and carbon efficiencies of collaboration in a heat network infrastructure.

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