Enabling sustainable transitions in coal and carbon-intensive regions

IF 9.1 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Diana Mangalagiu, Jenny Lieu, Fulvio Biddau, Amanda Martinez Reyes, Baiba Witajewska-Baltvilka
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Low-carbon transitions are particularly acute in coal and carbon-intensive regions (CCIRs), which face not only technological and economic barriers but also deep socio-political and cultural obstacles in moving away from carbon lock-in. Transforming these regions requires destabilizing and reconfiguring high-carbon regimes, often demanding structural changes across technological, socio-economic, political, and cultural domains. Despite increased attention to the decline of unsustainable energy systems, much research and policy remain short-sighted, often overlooking paradoxes, trade-offs, and spill-over effects during transitions. This Special Issue addresses the complexity of sustainability transitions in CCIRs from an interdisciplinary social science perspective, drawing on nine original contributions from the TIPPING+ project. The collection introduces advanced concepts, methods, and empirical evidence to better understand and navigate transitions in CCIRs, focusing on Social-Ecological Tipping Points. Through diverse case studies across Europe, Asia, and North America, the articles examine the interplay of forces shaping transition trajectories and highlight their non-linear, multi-scalar, and justice-sensitive nature. The Special Issue introduces frameworks for diagnosing transition states and identifying tipping dynamics, with attention to timing, territoriality, and equity. It further analyzes how political, economic, and governance conditions, as well as place-based narratives and cultural framings, influence the destabilization of carbon lock-ins and the legitimacy and direction of change. Collectively, the articles reframe transitions in CCIRs as embedded, justice-centred, and culturally contested processes, providing actionable insights for research, policy, and planning in sustainability transformations.
促进煤炭和碳密集地区的可持续转型
低碳转型在煤炭和碳密集型地区尤为严重,这些地区在摆脱碳锁定方面不仅面临技术和经济障碍,还面临深刻的社会政治和文化障碍。改变这些地区需要破坏和重新配置高碳制度,通常需要在技术、社会经济、政治和文化领域进行结构性变革。尽管越来越多的人关注不可持续能源系统的衰落,但许多研究和政策仍然目光短浅,往往忽视了过渡期间的悖论、权衡和溢出效应。本期特刊从跨学科社会科学的角度探讨了ccir可持续转型的复杂性,借鉴了TIPPING+项目的九篇原创文章。该系列介绍了先进的概念、方法和经验证据,以更好地理解和引导ccir的转变,重点是社会生态临界点。通过欧洲、亚洲和北美的不同案例研究,文章考察了形成转型轨迹的各种力量的相互作用,并强调了它们的非线性、多标量和正义敏感性。本期特刊介绍了诊断过渡状态和识别引爆动态的框架,并注意时间、地域和公平性。它进一步分析了政治、经济和治理条件,以及基于地方的叙述和文化框架,如何影响碳锁定的不稳定性以及变化的合法性和方向。总的来说,这些文章将ccir的转型重新定义为嵌入的、以正义为中心的、文化上有争议的过程,为可持续性转型的研究、政策和规划提供了可操作的见解。
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来源期刊
Global Environmental Change
Global Environmental Change 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
18.20
自引率
2.20%
发文量
146
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: Global Environmental Change is a prestigious international journal that publishes articles of high quality, both theoretically and empirically rigorous. The journal aims to contribute to the understanding of global environmental change from the perspectives of human and policy dimensions. Specifically, it considers global environmental change as the result of processes occurring at the local level, but with wide-ranging impacts on various spatial, temporal, and socio-political scales. In terms of content, the journal seeks articles with a strong social science component. This includes research that examines the societal drivers and consequences of environmental change, as well as social and policy processes that aim to address these challenges. While the journal covers a broad range of topics, including biodiversity and ecosystem services, climate, coasts, food systems, land use and land cover, oceans, urban areas, and water resources, it also welcomes contributions that investigate the drivers, consequences, and management of other areas affected by environmental change. Overall, Global Environmental Change encourages research that deepens our understanding of the complex interactions between human activities and the environment, with the goal of informing policy and decision-making.
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