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    20-12-2002

    Transitions & Transition Managementfor sustainable development

    Jan RotmansOECD, 12-13 December

    WHAT IS THE PROBLEM?

    Our society faces structural, wicked problems which cannot be solvedwith incremental changes

    agriculture, energy, water, health care, transport, ageing

    Increasing societal complexity forces us to think and act in a moreinnovative manner

    System complexity requires new way of looking at the nature of ourwicked problems

    new problem perceptions and solutions

    Societal complexity requires a new way of governancenew steering paradigm

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    NEW TYPE OF SOCIETAL PROBLEMS

    Characterized by

    large complexitystructural uncertaintyhigh stakessteering problems

    Which cannot be handled by current policies and current research

    we need structural changes in our thinking and acting

    transitions

    TRANSITIONS

    A transition is a social transformation process with thefollowing characteristics

    structural change to society (or complex subsystem ofsociety)

    a long-term process that covers at least one generation large-scale technological, economic, ecological, social-

    cultural and institutional developments that influence andstrengthen each other

    interactions between developments at different scale levels

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    EXAMPLES OF TRANSITIONS

    from industrial economy to services economy toknowledge economy

    from a communist system to a free market society

    from a coal-based energy infrastructure to natural gasenergy infrastructure

    Sociaal-cultural capital

    Ecological capital Economic capital

    economytransport

    energy

    ecology

    institutionswater

    culturetechnology

    co-evolutionary process

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    Transition concept

    sociological concept (Davis, 1945)population dynamics

    economic concept (Rostow, 1960)from a planned economy to market economy

    Innovation technological concept (Rip, 1998)multi-level technology dynamics

    Integrated Assessment concept (Rotmans, Kemp 2000)multi-scale, multi-temporal, multi-domain

    THE TRANSITION THEORY

    A theory with which the complexity and coherence of broad societalchanges can be ordered

    An analytical part which deals with the recognition of transitionpatterns based on multiple causality and co-evolution

    A steering part which deals with how to manage transitions into asustainable direction

    searching for the genes of sustainability dynamics

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    THE TRANSITION THEORY

    Consists of three pillars

    multi-phase concept

    multi-level concept

    multi-change concept

    Needs empirical validation

    MULTI-PHASE CONCEPT

    Pre-development phasedynamic equilibrium with no visible change

    Take-off phaseignition phase where shift begins

    Acceleration phase

    visible structural changes take place

    Stabilisation phase

    new dynamic equilibrium is reached

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    MULTI-PHASE CONCEPT

    Time

    System changeindicator

    Stabilisation

    Acceleration

    Take-off

    Pre-development

    TRANSITION TO INTEGRATED, CLEANAND INTELLIGENT TRANSPORT

    Carelectronics

    IntelligentHighways

    P + R, buslanes

    Personalisedpublic transport

    Fuel cellvehicles

    CO2policies

    Advanced collectivetransport (HST)

    Reduction in pollutionand energy use

    Organisedcar sharing

    Mobilitycards andleasing

    Anti -congestionpolicies

    Urbancars

    Integratedmobility

    Clean andintelligentcars

    Level ofintegration,amount ofbehaviouralchange

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    MULTI-LEVEL CONCEPT

    Macro-levelslow societal trends and developments: political culture,worldviews, paradigms, demography

    Meso-levelsocial norms, interests, rules and belief systems thatdetermine strategies of institutions and organisations

    Micro-levelniche-level at which individual actors operate

    MULTI-LEVEL CONCEPT

    Macro level (landscape)

    Meso level (regimes)

    Micro level (niches)

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    MULTI-CHANGE CONCEPTlemniscate of Holling

    1. exploitationperiod of competition between entrepeneurs

    2. conservationperiod of increasing rigidity and increasing connectedness

    3. releaseperiod of destabilisation through strong feedbacks between

    revolting elements and established aggregates

    4. reorganisationperiod of innovative experiments with high uncertainty

    Hollings Lemniscate

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    MULTI-SCALE CONCEPT

    Two different phases1. from exploitation to conservation

    accumulation of capitalpre-development and take-off phase

    2. from release to reorganisationinnovation and restructuringacceleration and stabilisation phase

    USING TRANSITION CONCEPTS

    we can analyse transition patterns in terms of:1. temporal dimension

    speed, size, time period of a transition

    2. scale level dimensionmicro-meso-macro-scale level of a transition

    3. nature of changebreakdown, innovation and restructuring

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    Can We Manage Transitions?

    Yes

    We can influence and guide the process

    Direction and speed of transitions

    No

    We cannot command and control transitions

    Uncertainty and surprises

    Transition Management

    Evolutionary steering conceptgovernance, interactive government, networking

    Multi-actor governanceaims at system innovation and sustainability

    Adaptive and Anticipative managementuncertainty and complexity management

    Steering through learning

    doing-by-learning and learning-by-doing

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    Transition managementnetwork steering and self-steering

    Desired situation:network steering and

    self steering

    Present situation: verticaland hierarchical steering

    Macro developments

    Transition management in practice

    Establishing and organising an innovation-network Transition arena of forerunners and innovators

    Developing long-term visions Transition goals, images and instruments

    Formulating and executing innovation experiments Learning-by-doing and doing-by-learning

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    Transition management versusCurrent Policy

    Current policy: short-term goals, per period

    Transition management offers a long-term perspective forshort-term actions

    Transition management: aimed at realising long-term sustainable goals inmore than one step

    Transition Arena- Long term- Frontrunners- Systeminnovation- Problem- andgoalsearching

    Communicating Arenas

    society

    Arena for current policy- Short term- Peloton- Incr. improvements- Problem- andgoaloriented

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    Communication with the home-bases

    Home basegovernment

    Home baseknowledge institutes

    Home baseNGOs

    Home basecompanies

    Transition arenaIndependentfacilitator

    Networkorientedpolicy-teams,

    supported by themanagement

    DUTCH CASE-STUDY:TRANSITION TO A SUSTAINABLE ENERGY SUPPLY

    Study for the Dutch Ministries of the Environmentand Economic Affairs

    What are the major barriers and chances for this transition?

    How could it be achieved?

    What is the role of the Dutch government?

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    CHANCES AND OBSTACLES FOR DUTCHENERGY TRANSITION

    Seems to be no reason for changeno calamities / nor direct cause

    Abundance of fossil energy sourceslow energy prices, low investment in alternatives

    Kyoto-protocolNetherlands could meet the Kyoto-climate targets (theoretically)

    Liberalizationshort-term focus on cost savings

    Fear for lock-in (energy companies)

    Obstacles

    CHANCES AND OBSTACLES FOR DUTCHENERGY TRANSITION

    Current energy supply is not sustainable

    detrimental environmental effects

    Growing notion in society that a shift towards a more sustainable energy supplyis necessaryglobal environmental problems are energy-driven

    Netherlands is vulnerable in case of dependency on one energy carriertechnological monoculture

    Delay of energy transformation leads to future problems

    future energy supply determined by current R&D investments

    Advisory bodies support and promote energy supply transitionenergy infrastructure has to change fundamentallyin the long run

    Chances

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    TRANSITION MANAGEMENT FOR LOWEMISSIONS ENERGY SUPPLY

    Step-wise approach

    Formulating common transition goal

    Exploring final energy transition images

    Formulating intermediate goals

    Create public support

    FORMULATE COMMONTRANSITION GOAL

    50% CO2-reduction

    structural change of energy infrastructure (innovation)

    cleaner energy infrastructure

    safer energy infrastructure

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    EXPLORE FINAL ENERGY IMAGES

    1. Status Quo: current infrastructure remains intact, but final energy carriers will bemade of sustainable energy sourcesfinal energy carriers: natural gas, oil and electricityprimary energy carriers: sustainable / clean fossil fuel

    infrastructure: remains the sametechnologies: conversion of biomass/coal

    Three blueprints for future Dutch energy supply

    2. Hydrogen: hydrogen as final energy carrier instead of natural gas and oil

    final energy carriers: hydrogenprimary energy carriers: sustainable / clean fossil fuelinfrastructure: adaptation of natural gas networktechnologies: fuel cells, hydrogen cars

    3. All-electric: electricity as final energy carrier in all sectors of society

    final energy carriers: electricityprimary energy carriers: sustainable / clean fossil fuelinfrastructure: large-scale electricity networktechnologies: elektric heat pumps / electric cars

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