4.7 Article

Digital twinning as an act of governance in the wind energy sector

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
Volume 127, Issue -, Pages 272-279

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2021.10.027

Keywords

Digital twins; Wind energy; Co-production; Governance by design; Boundary work

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme [763990]
  2. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [763990] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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Digital twins have emerged as a novel technology in the wind energy sector, allowing for the design, monitoring, and prediction of wind turbine performance. The design choices of digital twins by expert twinners, as well as regulation and matters of concern, play a significant role in influencing decision making in wind energy development. Transparency in the design process of digital twins is necessary to enhance their role in fostering sustainable energy systems and decision-making in wind energy technologies.
Digital twins have emerged as novel technology in the wind energy sector that enables the design, monitoring and prediction of wind turbine performance. Despite growing attention on their potential, little is known about how digital twins are designed, by whom and how their design choices affect multiple aspects of decision making in the development of wind energy. Using a framework of co-production, this paper examines digital twins as boundary objects and the role of twinning as boundary work that involves an active process of design and affects multiple aspects of decision making in the development of wind energy. Our results demonstrate how the design of digital twins evolves throughout the twinning process, affected by regulation, choices of expert twinners on data and models, and what constitutes a matter of concern. We shed light on the role of these twinners in influencing which actors and their matters of concern are included and excluded during the twinning process. Our understanding of twinning as an active process of governance by design more clearly reveals how digital twins are not objective representations of reality, but a function of boundary work. We conclude that more transparency is needed over how digital twins are designed to enhance their role as technologies that foster a transition towards more sustainable energy systems and decision-making over wind energy technologies and their integration in landscapes.

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