The water-energy-food (WEF) nexus is increasingly recognised as a conceptual framework able to support the efficient implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Despite growing attention paid to the WEF nexus, the role that renewable energies can play in addressing trade-offs and realising synergies has received limited attention. Until now, the focus of WEF nexus discussions and applications has mainly been on national or global levels, macro-level drivers, material flows and large infrastructure developments. This overlooks the fact that major nexus challenges are faced at local level. Aiming to address these knowledge gaps, the authors conduct a systematic analysis of the linkages between small-scale energy projects in developing countries and the food and water aspects of development. The analysis is based on empirical data from continuous process and impact evaluations complemented by secondary data and relevant literature. The study provides initial insights into how to identify interconnections and the potential benefits of integrating the nexus pillars into local level projects in the global south. The study identifies the complex links which exist between sustainable energy projects and the food and water sectors and highlights that these needs are currently not systematically integrated into project design or project evaluation. A more systematic approach, integrating the water and food pillars into energy planning at local level in the global south, is recommended to avoid trade-offs and enhance the development outcomes and impacts of energy projects.
This dialogue session series aims to advance evaluation efforts in sustainability transitions. The sessions focus on sustainability transition experiments that develop and test solutions that foster transformational change towards sustainability. The key objective is to facilitate learning from a variety of different transition experiments. Thus, gaining insights about their resources, conducted activities, generated results and accomplished sustainability progress will be at the heart of the session. The dialogue sessions bring together empirical research that adopts, rigorously applies and critically reflects the tentative evaluative scheme to appraise the performance of sustainability transition experiments (Luederitz et al. submitted). The follow up aim of the sessions is to jointly publish session outcomes and learning experiences. Reflections on evaluating Challenge Lab by applying a proposed scheme for Sustainability Transition Experiments. David Andersson, JohnHolmberg, Johan Larsson, Daniella Mendoza, Örjan Söderberg The Challenge Lab (CLab) is a neutral arena for triple helix stakeholders and an educational platform for master students to addresses complex challenges and system lockins. By the end of its third year, the CLab will have hosted nearly 100 students, producing 23 master thesis projects and 13 course projects. We present an evaluative case using the scheme proposed by Luederitz et al. (2016) for sustainability transition experiments which includes four main questions and a set of indicators for each question. We end with some general reflections on the evaluation method. A Transdisciplinary Project Course on Repair and Reuse in the Light of the Tentative Evaluation Scheme. Richard Beecroft, Kaidi Tamm, Oliver Parodi, Colette WaitzThe project we intend to evaluate with the "Tentative Evaluation Scheme" (TES) was a project course in winter term 2015 at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology under the title "Repair, Reuse, RecycleTransdisciplinary Project Course". It was a cooperation between the Karlsruhe School of Sustainability, and the "District Future -Urban Lab" ("Quartier Zukunft") -all KIT -with the repaircafe initiative Karlsruhe (RCIK).1 Its triple aim was to a) support the RCIK in its crucial stabilisation phase, b) to generate valuable transdisciplinary learning outcomes for the students (and other people involved) and c) to produce new insights into the potential for sustainability transitions regarding the repaircafe approach. Evaluating the transformative potential of sustainability entrepreneurship: the dynamics of small business participation in urban experiments. Sarah BurchThe alluring yet nebulous concept of transformative change is increasingly gaining traction in conversations about pathways to more sustainable futures and responses to climate change. This shift in focus from incremental change to potentially radical experiments in sustainability at multiple levels of government suggests that new conceptual tools are needed to illuminate new types of actors, interests, and cap...
In many developing countries large parts of the population are negatively affected by the lack of access to clean and affordable energy. Providing sustainable energy services to these people has been acknowledged as a key component to reduce poverty. One form of development assistance to address the needs of the energy-poor at the local level are smallscale renewable energy projects. Like all development interventions, these energy projects are not intended to produce short-term outputs, but to create long-term impacts. Thus, it has become increasingly important to evaluate and accurately assess their sustainability. But despite the widely recognized need to identify successes factors and explain failure only few studies exist that address the sustainability of small-scale of energy development efforts post implementation. Against this background the paper presents the results of a post-evaluation of 23 projects supported via the Sustainable Energy Project Support (SEPS) scheme of the WISIONS initiative run by the Wuppertal Institute. The analysis provides insights on the influence that socio-economic, environmental, geographic and gender factors can have on the sustainability of small-scale renewable energy projects in developing countries.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.