4.7 Article

Local niche experimentation in energy transitions: A theoretical and empirical exploration of proximity advantages and disadvantages

Journal

TECHNOLOGY IN SOCIETY
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 295-302

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.techsoc.2010.10.006

Keywords

Strategic Niche Management; Geography of innovation; Sustainability transitions; Experiments; Energy storage; The Netherlands

Funding

  1. Dutch Knowledge network for System Innovation and Transitions (KSI)
  2. Linnaeus grant of the Swedish Research Council

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This paper discusses how the approach of Strategic Niche Management (SNM) relates to proximity advantages in innovation processes as identified in the geography of innovation literature. The latter claims that the locations where innovation emerge and thrive are not coincidental, but that they follow certain patterns and explanatory logics. Such specific attention for explaining locations is not explicitly present in SNM, although this literature makes claims about the importance of experimentation in local settings, and local and global dynamics. Hence a confrontation of both literatures is thought to be promising. The paper draws on a theoretical discussion and a case study about aquifer thermal energy storage to conclude (1) that there is sufficient evidence for proximity dimensions in niche development; (2) that taking proximity dimensions seriously in SNM helps to unpack processes of upscaling and aggregation; (3) that literature on proximity and innovation can benefit from a more agency-based and dynamic perspective on proximity advantages; and (4) that there is a bias in proximity literature towards advantages of proximity while neglecting potential disadvantages for innovation, aggregation and upscaling. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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