Abstract

ABSTRACT Malmö aims to become Sweden’s most climate-smart city and Hyllie, its newest city district, is to lead the way. This ambition is front and centre in the 2011 Climate Contract that envisioned Hyllie as a climate-neutral city district. Malmö signed the Climate Contract with Eon, a multinational energy company. But five years after signing the Climate Contract, Malmö and Eon gave up their goal of a making Hyllie climate-neutral by 2020. The Climate Contract resembles other smart city initiatives that many researchers have criticised for promoting technology-centric, corporation-controlled visions of cities. Assemblage urbanism and the sociology of expectations help to analyse the techno-political dynamics between organisations, visions and urban infrastructure. The realisation of a vision is a techno-political process that requires the coordination of multiple groups around multiple promises. At first, it was the Climate Contract that helped Eon and the city administration to coordinate their activities. Subsequently, Eon made a promise to build wind turbines, and that promise then took precedence in the coordination of their activities. But controversies arose with two publics that emerged in opposition to Eon’s promise: neighbours to the site of the proposed wind turbine and the city’s Property Department. Unable to resolve these controversies, Eon and Malmö acknowledged that they lacked the resources need to make Hyllie climate-neutral. They adapted their original promise to the current state of socio-material assemblages, and Hyllie was demoted from a role model for the climate-smart city to a source of lessons learned.

Highlights

  • The Malmö city government has ambitions when it comes to sustainable urban planning

  • The Climate Contract resembles other smart city initiatives that many researchers have criticised for promoting technology-centric, corporation-controlled visions of cities

  • Assemblage urbanism and the sociology of expectations help to analyse the techno-political dynamics between organisations, visions and urban infrastructure

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Summary

Introduction

The Malmö city government has ambitions when it comes to sustainable urban planning. City leaders sought to make Malmö into Sweden’s most climate-smart city and this goal was front and centre in the vision for a new city district called Hyllie. The city government signed a vision called the Climate Contract in 2011, D. PARKS which envisioned that Hyllie would be climate-neutral by 2020. Thanks to the participation of Eon, a multinational energy company that operates Malmö’s energy grids, the Climate Contract envisioned Hyllie as a demonstration site for urban smart grids. Hyllie would lead the way for Malmö as a climatesmart city

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