Abstract

To achieve the international emission reduction targets, current researches underline the need to overcome the dominant techno-centric approaches to energy transition, in favor of analyses that explore in more detail those practices and organizational assets that play a role in favoring a transition towards a low-carbon society. In this light, the article focuses on governance practices and, in particular, on the different tools and actors involved across variable scales and temporalities. Drawing on the activities of the ERASMUS+ Strategic Partnership for Higher Education LOTUS (Locally Organized Transition of Urban Sustainable Spaces), a selection of European case studies is explored and compared in light of (i) the implemented actions in terms of energy production and efficiency measures, (ii) the legal framework and the origin of the funding and (iii) the number and type of involved actors and their partnerships. On this basis, the analysis outlines, from both a theoretical and a practical stand, a number of critical issues that characterize these episodes of energy transition governance. In particular, the authors reflect upon the interaction between energy measures and urban contexts, the need for synergies among government level and the emergence of new forms of partnership among public, private and third parties’ actors.

Highlights

  • The European Union (EU) has been developing policies aiming at more sustainable use of energy resources for almost two decades [1]

  • Accounting for more than 70% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from final energy use, cities are required to play a pivotal role in implementing the strategy, and have been progressively defining governing arrangements and policies aiming at energy transition and, more in general, paving the way towards a low-carbon society [5,6]

  • In the following sub-sections, we discuss the main results of the analysis of the case studies on the basis of the three research questions around which the paper is pivoted: (i) What are the implemented actions in terms of energy production and efficiency measures? (ii) What are the legal framework and the origin of the funding within which the experiences develop? (iii) What are the number and types of involved actors and what partnerships link them? The discussion is further framed by considerations deriving from the comparison of the case studies’ results (Table 2), in relation to three main factors: (i) the territorial scale they focus on, (ii) the planning tool they adopt and (iii) the main issue they deal with

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Summary

Introduction

The European Union (EU) has been developing policies aiming at more sustainable use of energy resources for almost two decades [1]. As argued by [10], this gap between policy and practice can be related to three main factors: (i) the local history of engagement with environmental issues, (ii) the lack of competencies and (iii) the scarce availability of financial resources In this direction, numerous contributions already underlined the need to adopt a more holistic approach and to consider the decarbonization of cities as a complex transition, where energy efficiency measures and technologies for energy conservation are conceived not just as “engineered artefacts” and as social configurations which have emerged contingently in particular contexts [11,12,13,14,15]. Three main criteria have been adopted in the selection: (i) the cases should concern issues related to the energy and environmental spheres, but integrate economic, social and governance aspects; (ii) they all should be completed or well advanced and start from the assumption of aiming at sustainable and energy-saving targets in local urban realities, in technological, organizational and social terms; and (iii) they should include a plurality of individual and collective actors (in term of interests, resources and knowledge) who belong to the public and/or private arena, including owners, managers, users, agencies, local organizations and others

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