The politics of co-benefits in India’s energy sector

J. Mayrhofer, J. Gupta
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Emerging economies are struggling to make their development plans sustainable. India, for example, has adopted the co-benefits approach in its climate policy to integrate interconnected environmental, economic and social issues. The literature treats co-benefits as a politically neutral technocratic policy instrument for reducing greenhouse gases. But, what are the real potential benefits and limits of the co-benefits approach in the Indian institutional context? Drawing on discursive institutionalism, we highlight the interplay between ‘co-benefits’, the discursive processes through which it has evolved, the interests it has given expression to, and the Indian institutional context that mediates these processes. The successful adoption of this approach can be explained through the flexibility with which different actors interpret it and express their interests through storylines. Yet, this interpretive flexibility also explains the limited success in implementing this approach in India’s energy sector. To overcome existing limitations, we suggest the necessity of triple-loop transformational learning.
印度能源部门的共同利益政治
新兴经济体正在努力制定可持续的发展计划。例如,印度在其气候政策中采用了共同利益的方法,将相互关联的环境、经济和社会问题整合在一起。文献将共同利益视为减少温室气体排放的政治中立的技术官僚政策工具。但是,在印度的制度背景下,共同利益方法的真正潜在好处和局限性是什么?利用话语制度主义,我们强调了“共同利益”之间的相互作用,它所发展的话语过程,它所表达的利益,以及调解这些过程的印度制度背景。这种方法的成功采用可以通过不同参与者通过故事情节解释它并表达他们的兴趣的灵活性来解释。然而,这种解释的灵活性也解释了这种方法在印度能源部门实施的有限成功。为了克服现有的限制,我们建议有必要进行三环转换学习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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