Print Email Facebook Twitter Methodology to identify demand-side low-carbon innovations and their potential impact on socio-technical energy systems Title Methodology to identify demand-side low-carbon innovations and their potential impact on socio-technical energy systems Author Hoicka, Christina E. (York University) Das, Runa R. (Royal Roads University) Zhao, Yuxu (York University) McMaster, Maria Louise (York University) Lieu, J. (TU Delft Organisation & Governance) Wyse, Susan (York University) Date 2021 Abstract The rapid diffusion of demand-side low-carbon innovations has been identified as a key strategy for maintaining average global temperature rise at or below 1.5 °C. Diffusion research tends to focus on a single sector, or single technology case study, and on a small scope of factors that influence innovation diffusion. This paper describes a novel methodology for identifying multiple demand-side innovations within a specific energy system context and for characterizing their impact on socio-technical energy systems. This research employs several theoretical frameworks that include the Energy Technology Innovation System (ETIS) framework to develop a sample of innovations; the Sustainability Transitions framework to code innovations for their potential to impact the socio-technical system; the energy justice framework to identify the potential of innovations to address aspects of justice; and how characteristics of innovations are relevant to Innovation Adoption. This coding and conceptualization creates the foundation for the future development of quantitative models to empirically assess and quantify the rate of low-carbon innovation diffusion as well as understanding the broader relationship between the diffusion of innovations and socio-technical system change. The three stages of research are: • Contextualization: surveys and desk research to identify low-carbon innovations across the ETIS; • Decontextualization: the development of a codebook of variables • Recontextualization: coding the innovations and analysis. Subject Demand-sideDiffusion of innovationsEnergy justiceEnergy technology innovation systemEnergy transitionInnovation adoptionLow-carbon innovationsMethodology to identify demand-side low-carbon innovations and their potential impact on socio-technical energy systemsSocio-technical systemsSurveySustainability transitions To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:37d5b888-1392-40a7-b822-f87cbe2b5879 DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mex.2021.101295 Source MethodsX, 8 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2021 Christina E. Hoicka, Runa R. Das, Yuxu Zhao, Maria Louise McMaster, J. Lieu, Susan Wyse Files PDF 1_s2.0_S2215016121000881_main.pdf 1.11 MB PDF 1_s2.0_S2215016121000881_mmc1.pdf 2.21 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:37d5b888-1392-40a7-b822-f87cbe2b5879/datastream/OBJ1/view