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Inside the Energiewende

Twists and Turns on Germany’s Soft Energy Path

  • Book
  • © 2020

Overview

  • Offers an impartial view on various social and technical aspects of the German energy transition
  • Includes in-depth interviews with energy experts
  • Adopts a critical stance on Germany’s energy transition, increasing readers’ awareness of the undesired consequences that tend to accompany transition processes

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Energy (LNEN, volume 75)

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book tells the story of one nation’s sustained efforts to steer its economy toward low carbon technologies and to define national and global pathways for mitigating climate change. Drawing on a long career in Germany’s energy sector, and on subsequent academic research, the book reveals the weaknesses of and critical trade-offs in Germany’s bold energy transition plan − the Energiewende − and explores their causes.

Its goal is to provide insights to help policymakers and energy managers keep some of the problems that have plagued the Energiewende at bay, and to instead explore avenues that are more likely to succeed. While such insights cannot solve the problem of socio-technical change overnight, they do reveal alternative transition pathways that keep climate goals clearly in sight, even if they are pursued with a bit less exuberance and a bit more humility. The book is addressed to academic, professional, and political readers alike.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Tempe, USA

    Christine Sturm

About the author

Dr. Christine Sturm is an independent scholar who has held several management positions in the renewable energy division of RWE, one of Germany’s largest utility groups. Dr. Sturm has also worked for multinational paper corporations and led the negotiations for the deregulation of the German gas markets, acting on behalf of the Federation of German Industries (BDI), and the Association of Large Industrial Energy Consumers (VIK). While still working for RWE, she pursued a doctorate at the School of Sustainability, Arizona State University, receiving her degree in 2018. Her research analyzed Germany’s Energiewende, the difficulties encountered in the energy transition, and the means by which system managers and reformers are adapting to unintended consequences. During the academic year 2018 -2019 she was a Research Fellow at the American University of Armenia. 

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