The crucial role of complementarity, transparency and adaptability for designing energy policies for sustainable development
Autor: | Joana Portugal-Pereira, Michael Pahle, Roberto Schaeffer, Corrado Di Maria, Kejun Jiang, Chenmin He, Elena Verdolini, Wenying Chen, Jiyong Eom, Aayushi Awasthy, George Safonov, Shonali Pachauri |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Universal design Best practice media_common.quotation_subject Complementarity Management Monitoring Policy and Law Transparency 7. Clean energy 01 natural sciences Energy policy Adaptability 12. Responsible consumption Energy policies Sustainable development 11. Sustainability 050602 political science & public administration 0105 earth and related environmental sciences media_common 05 social sciences Environmental economics 0506 political science General Energy 13. Climate action Complementarity (molecular biology) Transparency (graphic) Business Diminishing returns |
Popis: | The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Paris Agreement have ushered in a new era of policymaking to deliver on the formulated goals. Energy policies are key to ensuring universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy (SDG7). Yet they can also have considerable impact on other goals. To successfully achieve multiple goals concurrently, policies need to balance different objectives and manage their interactions. Refining previously contemplated design principles, we identify three key principles - complementary, transparency and adaptability - as highly pertinent for multiple-objective energy policies based on a synthesis of seventeen coordinated policy case studies. First, policies should entail complementary measures and design provisions that specifically target non-energy objectives (complementarity). Second, policy impacts should be tracked comprehensively in both energy and non-energy domains to uncover diminishing returns and facilitate policy learning (transparency). Third, policies should be capable of adapting to changing objectives over time (adaptability). These principles are rarely considered in current policies, implying the need to mainstream them into the next generation of policymaking by pointing to best practices and new tools. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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