Analysing the Institutional Setting of Local Renewable Energy Planning and Implementation in the EU: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conceptualizing the Action Arena
3. Research Design and Methodology
3.1. Case Selection and Conceptualisation
3.2. Literature Search and Selection Criteria
3.2.1. Search strategy Cycle 1: Systematic Database Search
3.2.2. Search Strategy Cycle 2: Snowballing
3.2.3. Selection Criteria
3.3. Data Preparation and Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Introducing the Selected Articles
4.1.1. Articles by Year and Journal
4.1.2. Countries and Studied Cases
4.1.3. Bio-Physical Conditions
4.1.4. Attributes of the Community
4.2. Results of the Qualitative Analysis
4.2.1. Actors
4.2.2. Positions
4.2.3. (Possible) Actions
4.2.4. Information
4.2.5. Control
4.2.6. Net Costs and Benefits
5. Discussion
5.1. Propositions
5.1.1. Institutional Rules Cluster 1: Actors
5.1.2. Institutional Rules Cluster 2: Positions
5.1.3. Institutional Rules Cluster 3: (Possible) Actions
5.1.4. Institutional Rules Cluster 4: Information
5.1.5. Institutional Rules Cluster 5: Control
5.1.6. Institutional Rules Cluster 6: Net Costs and Benefits
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Coding Scheme
Categories | Codes |
---|---|
Actors | Actors |
Positions |
|
Actions |
|
Information |
|
Control |
|
Net costs and benefits |
|
(Potential) outcomes |
|
Bio-physical conditions | Physical and material conditions |
Attributes of community | Attributes of Community |
Barrier | Barrier |
Enabling condition | Enabling condition Enabling condition |
Appendix B
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Action Situation Elements | Conceptualisation |
---|---|
Actors | Actors that participate in the decision-making process—e.g., a municipality, Distribution System Operators (DSO), housing association, tenants, community energy initiative, project developer. |
Positions | Positions that actors hold in the decision-making processes—e.g., a policy entrepreneur [15,16], niche manager [17], network manager [18,19]. |
Actions | Actions that can/have been taken. The (legal) possibilities that exist for collaboration—e.g., possible actions, laws and regulations, or policy instruments. |
Information | Information available to actors. Including information about technology, policies, meetings, websites, costs and benefits and the outcomes of one’s own actions—e.g., framing debates [20], spanning boundaries between policy different domains [21]. |
Control | Whether actors take actions on their own initiative, or whether they confer with others—e.g., individual action, collective action, or in coalitions (e.g., advocacy or discourse coalitions) [20,22], co-creation [23], co-production [24]. |
Net costs and benefits | The costs of various actions to each type of actor and the kinds of benefits to be achieved as a result of various group outcomes—e.g., costs of project, pay-back time, distribution of costs and benefits among actors. |
(Potential) outcomes | The geographic regions and events in that region that are affected. The chain of events that links actions to outcomes—e.g., evaluation and implementation research [25,26,27]. |
No. | Cluster | Search Terms |
---|---|---|
Empirical case study | ||
1 | Energy | Renewable energy technologies, energy, electricity, energy efficiency, low carbon |
2 | Planning process | spatial, planning, decision-making, policy, process, governance, stakeholders, management, climate policy, project |
3 | Object of change | construction, implementation, renovation, buildings, infrastructure, utility, development |
4 | Location/scale | Neighbourhood, residential, local, municipal/ity, urban, housing, district, city |
Literature used in the Systematic Literature Analysis | Number in Reference List |
---|---|
Chmutina, Wiersma, Goodier, & Devine-Wright, 2014; | [37] |
Devine-Wright & Wiersma, 2013; | [38] |
Elle et al., 2002; | [6] |
Frances & Stevenson, 2018; | [39] |
Fuchs & Hinderer, 2014; | [40] |
Gansmo, 2012; | [41] |
Gustavsson & Elander, 2016; | [42] |
Hoppe, 2012; | [43] |
Jensen & Maslesa, 2015; | [44] |
Klein Woolthuis, Hooimeijer, Bossink, Mulder, & Brouwer, 2013; | [45] |
Lammers & Heldeweg, 2016; | [46] |
Moss, Becker, & Naumann, 2015; | [47] |
Muyingo, 2015; | [48] |
Parks, 2018; | [49] |
Quitzau, Hoffmann, & Elle, 2012; | [50] |
Quitzau, Jense, Elle, & Hoffmann, 2013; | [51] |
Schroepfer & Hee, 2008; | [52] |
Smedby & Quitzau, 2016; | [53] |
Strasser, 2015; | [54] |
Van Der Waals, Vermeulen, & Glasbergen, 2003; | [55] |
Van Doren, Driessen, Runhaar, & Giezen, 2018; | [56] |
Viétor, Hoppe, & Clancy, 2015; | [57] |
Williams, 2010; | [58] |
Williams, 2012. | [59] |
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Lammers, I.; Hoppe, T. Analysing the Institutional Setting of Local Renewable Energy Planning and Implementation in the EU: A Systematic Literature Review. Sustainability 2018, 10, 3212. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10093212
Lammers I, Hoppe T. Analysing the Institutional Setting of Local Renewable Energy Planning and Implementation in the EU: A Systematic Literature Review. Sustainability. 2018; 10(9):3212. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10093212
Chicago/Turabian StyleLammers, Imke, and Thomas Hoppe. 2018. "Analysing the Institutional Setting of Local Renewable Energy Planning and Implementation in the EU: A Systematic Literature Review" Sustainability 10, no. 9: 3212. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10093212
APA StyleLammers, I., & Hoppe, T. (2018). Analysing the Institutional Setting of Local Renewable Energy Planning and Implementation in the EU: A Systematic Literature Review. Sustainability, 10(9), 3212. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10093212