Description
The Energiewende aims to drastically reduce Germany’s greenhouse gas emissions, without relying on nuclear power, while maintaining a secure and affordable energy supply. Since 2000 the country’s renewable-energy share has increased exponentially, accounting in 2017 for over a third of Germany's gross electricity consumption. This unprecedented achievement is the result of policies, tools, and institutional arrangements intended to steer society to a low-carbon economy. Despite its resounding success in renewable-energy deployment, the Energiewende is not on track to meet its decarbonization goals. Energiewende rules and regulations have generated numerous undesired consequences, and have cost much more than anticipated, a burden borne primarily by energy consumers. Why has the Energiewende not only made energy more expensive, but also failed to bring Germany closer to its decarbonization goals? I analyzed the Energiewende as a complex socio-technical system, examining its legal framework and analyzing the consequences of successive regulations; identifying major political and energy players and the factors that motivated them to pursue socio-technical change; and documenting the political trends and events in which the Energiewende is rooted and which continue to shape it. I analyzed the dynamics and the loopholes that created barriers to transition, pushed the utility sector to the brink of dissolution, and led to such undesirable outcomes as negative wholesale prices and forced exports of electricity to Germany’s European neighbors. Thirty high-level energy experts and stakeholders were interviewed to find out how the best-informed members of German society perceive the Energiewende. Surprisingly, although they were highly critical of the way the transition has unfolded, most were convinced that the transition would eventually succeed. But their definitions of success did not always depend on achieving carbon-mitigation targets. Indeed, Germany jeopardizes the achievement of these targets by changing too many policy and institutional variables at too fast a pace. Good intentions and commitment are not enough to create economies based on intermittent energy sources: they will also require intensive grid expansion and breakthroughs in storage technology. The Energiewende demonstrates starkly that collective action driven by robust political consensus is not sufficient for steering complex socio-technical systems in desired directions.
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Details
Title
- Germany's energy transition experiment: a case study about guiding decisions and steering large socio-technical systems in desired directions
Contributors
- Sturm, Christine (Author)
- Sarewitz, Daniel (Thesis advisor)
- Miller, Clark (Committee member)
- Anderies, John (Committee member)
- Hirt, Paul (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2018
Subjects
- Alternative Energy
- public policy
- Sustainability
- Energiewende
- Energy Transitions
- Innovation policy
- Institutional Analysis
- Large Socio-Technical Systems
- Renewable Energy
- Renewable energy sources--Government policy--Germany.
- Renewable energy sources
- Renewable energy sources--Law and legislation--Germany.
- Renewable energy sources
- Renewable energy sources--Political aspects--Germany.
- Renewable energy sources
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
- Vita
- thesisPartial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2018
- bibliographyIncludes bibliographical references (pages 289-321)
- Field of study: Sustainability
Citation and reuse
Statement of Responsibility
by Christine Sturm