Sustainability transitions in energy, mobility, food: Research shifts focus from goals to real-world change processes
Joint Press Release of University of Manchester, Institute for Ecological Economy Research, and Harvard University
► Research on sustainability transitions has progressed significantly over the past decade, generating insights about the dynamics of long-term, large-scale change
► Special feature on Sustainability Transitions in Consumption-Production Systems published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
► Editors call for closer collaboration between scientific communities working on socio-environmental and socio-technical transitions
Manchester/Berlin/Cambridge, 21st of November 2023 – Existing consumption and production systems, which use natural resources to meet societal needs for food, shelter, energy and health, are unsustainable. Although researchers from different disciplines have long investigated how these systems can become more sustainable, scientists from socio-technical and socio-environmental research communities are now seeking to join forces. A special feature in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which was guest edited by researchers from the University of Manchester, the Institute for Ecological Economy Research, and Harvard University, presents new findings about transitions in electricity, food, and mobility systems.
These findings synthesize, elaborate and apply research on sustainability transitions, which has progressed significantly over the past decade, generating novel insights about the dynamics of transitions. This research shifts the focus from sustainability goals and targets to the real-world change processes that could help to meet those targets. The special feature contains 15 articles that present new insights on transitions to a wider sustainability science audience, policymakers, and practitioners.
Large-scale, long-term changes of systems needed
“The central challenge of our age is how to make development sustainable – to assure that it advances people’s well-being in the here and now, without unfairly constraining the ability of people elsewhere, or in the future, to advance their own well-being”, says William Clark, professor at Harvard University and director of its Sustainability Science Program. “That requires transitions, by which we mean significant large-scale, long-term changes in the actors, institutions, technologies, and resources that make up consumption-production systems.” The papers in the special feature analyze these changes for electricity, mobility, and food systems. In addition, they address crosscutting issues such as the destabilization of existing systems, the role of shocks, and the governance of transitions.
Core aspects of transitions research: multi-level interactions, solutions, process of change
“The special feature makes three contributions to the pursuit of sustainability: highlighting the importance of multi-level interactions in sustainability transitions, a focus on solutions (innovation), and a deeper and more differentiated analysis of the processes of change”, explains Frank Geels, professor of sustainability transitions at the University of Manchester. “It is interesting to see that transitions in the electricity, mobility, and food systems are currently unfolding at different speeds and depths. This is due to different techno-economic developments and socio-political activities. They have progressed farthest in the electricity system. In the (auto)mobility system they are beginning to unfold, and in food systems they appear to be in early phases.”
The papers demonstrate the multi-dimensional nature of sustainability transition processes, which cannot be reduced to purely technological or economic explanations. Instead, they show the importance of understanding sustainability transitions as multi-level, systemic, incomplete, and contested processes, in which innovation plays an essential role that is always shaped by and contributing to social, political, economic, and cultural developments.
Deeper transitions are slower
“One of the important findings from across the special feature is that transitions are often about reconfiguration rather than substitution of existing systems, and that there are tensions between depth and speed of change: the deeper a change, the more difficult and slower it tends to be. It is also important to recognize that the governance of transitions is highly political and can be very politicized. There are winners and losers”, states Florian Kern, transitions researcher at the Berlin-based Institute for Ecological Economy Research. “While recognizing various complexities, the special feature also shows how transition processes can be accelerated and steered in more sustainable directions. This is crucial, because historical transitions were often slow, decade-long processes, while time is pressing for addressing the multiple, interacting crises of the present.”
The Special Feature on Sustainability transitions in consumption-production systems in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences is published open access and can be found here: https://www.pnas.org/topic/551.
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Table of contents and to download articles:
https://www.pnas.org/topic/551
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Press Contact:
Ben Robinson
News and Media Relations Manager
The University of Manchester
Oxford Road
Manchester M13 9PL
Tel.: +44 161 275 8257
Mob.: +44 792 0750 602
media.relations@manchester.ac.uk
Richard Harnisch
Institute for Ecological Economy Research (IÖW)
Potsdamer Str. 105
D-10785 Berlin
Tel.: +49 30/884594-16
presse@ioew.de
Sharon Wilke
Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
Harvard Kennedy School of Government
79 John F Kennedy St.
Cambridge MA 02138 USA
Tel.: +1 617 495-9858
sharon_wilke@hks.harvard.edu
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The Manchester Institute of Innovation Research at the University of Manchester is a centre of excellence in the field of innovation studies. The Institute consists of a group of internationally renowned scholars and experts, and supports a broad expertise across a range of academic disciplines. With more than 50 full members, approximately 30 PhD researchers, and a range of associated academics, we are one of the world’s leading research centres in our field. Sustainability Transitions Research is one of the Institute’s core themes.
www.mioir.manchester.ac.uk/
The Institute for Ecological Economy Research (IÖW) is a leading scientific institute in the field of practice-oriented sustainability research. About 70 employees develop strategies and approaches for a sustainable economy – for an economy that enables a good life and preserves the natural foundations. The institute operates on a non-profit basis and without basic public funding. The IÖW is a member of the “Ecological Research Network” (Ecornet), the network of non-university, non-profit environmental and sustainability research institutes in Germany.
www.ioew.de
The Sustainability Science Program at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government harnesses the University's strengths to promote the design of institutions, policies, and practices that support sustainable development. The Program addresses the challenge of sustainable development by advancing scientific understanding of human-environment systems; improving linkages between research and policy communities; and building capacity for linking knowledge with action to promote sustainability. The Program has supported major initiatives in policy design, faculty research, training of students and fellows, teaching, and public outreach.
www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/mrcbg/programs/sustsci
Wissenschaftlicher Ansprechpartner:
Frank W. Geels
University of Manchester
Manchester, UK
tel: +44 (0)748 253 4966
frank.geels@manchester.ac.uk
Florian Kern
Institute for Ecological Economy Research (IÖW)
Berlin, Germany
tel: +49 30 884594 76
florian.kern@ioew.de
William C. Clark
Harvard University
Cambridge, MA, USA
tel: +1 617 875 9903
william_clark@hks.harvard.edu