Scientific article
English

A review of socio-technical energy transition (STET) models

Published inTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, vol. 100, p. 290-305
Publication date2015
Abstract

Many existing technical feasibility and modelling studies in the energy field are criticised for their limited treatment of societal actors and socio-political dynamics, poor representation of the co-evolving nature of society and technology, and hence an inability to analyse socio-technical change. At the same time, prominent conceptual frameworks of socio-technical transitions that address these elements are often found to be difficult to operationalize in quantitative energy analyses that meet policy development requirements. However a new energy modelling paradigm has started to emerge for integrating both quantitative modelling and conceptual socio-technical transitions. This paper provides a taxonomy for this new model category: ‘socio-technical energy transition' (STET) models. A review of existing STET models and their applications to the energy supply, buildings and transport sectors is provided. Following this review, the paper reflects on the extent to which these existing quantitative models captured the variety of factors covered in socio-technical transitions theory, highlights the challenges associated with their theoretical and behavioural validation, and proposes future development priorities for STET models.

Keywords
  • Socio-technical transitions
  • Models
  • Simulation
  • Energy
  • Transport
  • Buildings
Affiliation entities Not a UNIGE publication
Citation (ISO format)
LI, Francis G.N., TRUTNEVYTE, Evelina, STRACHAN, Neil. A review of socio-technical energy transition (STET) models. In: Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 2015, vol. 100, p. 290–305. doi: 10.1016/j.techfore.2015.07.017
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
accessLevelRestricted
Identifiers
Journal ISSN0040-1625
523views
0downloads

Technical informations

Creation23/01/2018 10:00:00
First validation23/01/2018 10:00:00
Update time15/03/2023 08:46:47
Status update15/03/2023 08:46:47
Last indexation31/10/2024 10:24:45
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack