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Chapter 25 - Policies for Capacity Development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2012

Lynn Mytelka
Affiliation:
United Nations University-MERIT
Francisco Aguayo
Affiliation:
El Colegio de México
Grant Boyle
Affiliation:
McCarthy Tétrault LLP
Sylvia Breukers
Affiliation:
Duneworks
Gabriel de Scheemaker
Affiliation:
Conduit Ventures Ltd.
Ibrahim Abdel Gelil
Affiliation:
Arabian Gulf University
René Kemp
Affiliation:
United Nations University-MERIT
Joachim Monkelbaan
Affiliation:
International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development
Carolina Rossini
Affiliation:
University of São Paulo
Jim Watson
Affiliation:
University of Sussex
Rosemary Wolson
Affiliation:
Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Staffan Jacobsson
Affiliation:
Chalmers University of Technology
Upendra Tripathy
Affiliation:
Government of India
John T. Wilbanks
Affiliation:
The Ewing Marro Kauffman Foundation
Youba Sokona
Affiliation:
United Nations Economic Commission
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Summary

Executive Summary

This chapter focuses on capacities and capacity development for energy transitions. The transitions put forward in GEA require a transformation of energy systems that demand significant changes in the way energy is supplied and used today, irrespective of whether the technologies involved are new to the world or to a country, its producers or users.

Energy transitions are, by definition, long-term, socially embedded processes in the course of which capacities at the individual, organizational, and systems levels, as well as the policies for capacity development themselves, will inevitably change. From this perspective, capacity development can no longer be seen as a simple aggregation of individual skills and competences or the introduction of a new “technology.” Rather, it is a broad process of change in production and consumption patterns, knowledge, skills, organizational forms, and – most importantly – in the established practices and norms of the actors involved, or what are called informal institutions. In other words, a host of new and enhanced capacities will be needed over time. Informal institutions are reflected in a range of beliefs and boundaries that shape choices about new energy technologies. These can include engineering beliefs about what is feasible or worth attempting and boundaries that shape the processes of choice, such as lines of research to pursue, kinds of products to produce, or practices of consultation and dialogue. They also emerge as “path dependence” in contexts where earlier investments result in high sunk costs, habits and practices are entrenched, and “expert views” are shaped by earlier thinking that narrows the range of choices to established technologies and evaluation techniques.

Type
Chapter
Information
Global Energy Assessment
Toward a Sustainable Future
, pp. 1745 - 1802
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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