Abstract

The literature on socio-technical transitions considers how technological innovations can be established within the context of an incumbent regime that is often resistant or inflexible to change. Strategic niche management is an approach to catalysing a transition to a new regime using protected ‘niche’ spaces to enable development and experimentation with an innovation. Intermediary actors play an important role in establishing these niches as they facilitate knowledge sharing and build the wider networks and systems needed to support an innovation.The influence of intermediaries within socio-technical transitions and strategic niche management is still an under-researched area. In this paper, we use a decision theatre research process to collect empirical evidence from a range of local stakeholders involved in establishing new district heating projects in the United Kingdom (UK). This method, carried out in a group workshop format, enables understanding of the interactions between stakeholders throughout the stages of the district heating development process.The study suggests that intermediaries can play a role in supporting niche empowering processes. The existing institutional framework surrounding intermediary actors, and the geographical scale at which they work within that framework, are shown to be influential on actors’ agency to choose their approach to empowering an innovation. The work highlights the potential for intermediaries to support the restructuring of this institutional framework to enable more radical ‘stretch and transform’ empowering activities.

Highlights

  • The challenge of mitigating climate change has brought with it various visions and scenarios for how to decarbonise a world currently reliant on fossil fuels (Connolly et al, 2014; IEA, 2013)

  • Kern et al (2015) recommend that future research should “consider what kind of processes enable the building of a sufficient power base to challenge dominant rules” (p.354, Kern et al, 2015). We address this question by considering the role of intermediaries in developing a supportive institutional framework for successful niche empowering processes in the case of district heating

  • We have used a case study of new district heating development in the United Kingdom (UK) to demonstrate that intermediaries can play a role in supporting niche empowering processes as well as niche nurturing processes

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Summary

Introduction

The challenge of mitigating climate change has brought with it various visions and scenarios for how to decarbonise a world currently reliant on fossil fuels (Connolly et al, 2014; IEA, 2013). Low carbon innovations can be locked-out of incumbent regimes in the context of a complex socio-technical system that is often resistant to radical changes (van der Vleuten and Raven, 2006). R.E. Bush et al / Journal of Cleaner Production 148 (2017) 137e147 place. Bush et al / Journal of Cleaner Production 148 (2017) 137e147 place They must empower it to diffuse beyond the niche space (Smith and Raven, 2012). The theoretical understanding of niche empowering processes is still developing and it is to this area of the socio-technical transitions literature that this paper seeks to contribute

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