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In a recent study presented at the
international conference, “Our Common
Future under Climate Change,” Kraxner,
Leduc, and colleagues found that
bioenergy projects proposed for Indonesia
in combination with carbon capture and
storage technologies—intended as a
method to produce energy with net negative
emissions—could actually interfere with
other efforts in the country to mitigate
climate change through forest protection.
The study provides a better understanding of
the trade-offs for forest protection that would
accompany different decisions on bioenergy.
The people problem
Such clear results from a data-driven
model can provide a great starting point
for policymakers and regional planners.
But what happens if the public—who may
have different perspectives on how natural
landscapes should be used—turn against
renewable energy?
One way to avoid such conflicts,
researchers say, is to find ways to incorporate
people’s values into the analyses, listening
to all sides and incorporating their input. The recharge.green project included
a major component for stakeholder
engagement and communication, leading
researchers to try to account for the value
of landscape beauty, recreation, and other
“unmeasurable” factors.
Meanwhile, researchers in the IIASA
Risk, Policy and Vulnerability program are
exploring the factors that influence people
to support or oppose renewable energy
projects as well as the willingness to use
renewable energy. Researchers Masoud
Yazdanpanah and Nadejda Komendatova
recently conducted a series of surveys on
renewable energy in Iran, a country heavily
reliant on fossil fuels. They found that
socio-psychological factors, such as moral
norms, attitudes, and perceived behavioral
control have a significant impact on support
of renewable energy, and play a major role
in people’s willingness to use renewable
energy sources. This growing body of
research will provide an important basis for
energy policymakers in Iran and beyond.
Kraxner says that the issue of public
support is one of the most challenging
research problems for many IIASA researchers. “It is extremely difficult to
incorporate social issues into scientific
analysis,” he says, “There is always
something missing, and it is frustrating
to deal with these data gaps. Yet it is vital
that we try. We can fine-tune models to
discover the climate impacts of small shifts
in energy and technology use. But to make
those results useful for policy, we need to
integrate an understanding of social and
political factors into our analyses.” KL
Further info
§ Kraxner F, Leduc S, Yowargana P, Schepaschenko S,
Fuss S, Havlik P, Mosnier A (2015). Negative
emissions—interactions with other mitigation
options: A bottom-up methodology for Indonesia.
Poster presented at the International Scientific
Conference, “Our Common Future under Climate
Change,” 7–10 July 2015, Paris, France.
§ Yazdanpanah M, Komendantova N, Shirazi ZN
(2015). Green or in between? Examining youth
perceptions of renewable energy in Iran.
Energy Research & Social Science 8:78–85
[doi:10.1016/j.erss.2015.04.011].
§ www.iiasa.ac.at/news/recharge-15
§ www.iiasa.ac.at/bewhere
§ www.recharge-green.eu
Florian Kraxner kraxner@iiasa.ac.at
Sylvain Leduc leduc@iiasa.ac.at
Nadejda Komendantova komendan@iiasa.ac.at
balancingact
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band winter 2015/2016"
options
Band winter 2015/2016
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2015/2016
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2015
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine