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Identifying social and political obstacles to bioethanol production from sugarcane in East Java, Indonesia

Carlsson, Anna LU (2017) UTVK03 20171
Sociology
Abstract
Indonesia has implemented national policies and legislations to encourage biofuel production as means to achieve energy security and self-sufficiency and to reduce reliance of fossil fuel reserves. However, there is still no clear road-map for the socio-technological transition. While acknowledging economic impediments, this case study investigates social and political obstacles to bioethanol production from sugarcane in East Java, Indonesia. This study is based on Multi-Level Perspective and Technological Innovation System as integrated theoretical frameworks together with Political Ecology as an approach to get around the complexity of biofuels. Based on primary data, the research identifies several social and political obstacles to the... (More)
Indonesia has implemented national policies and legislations to encourage biofuel production as means to achieve energy security and self-sufficiency and to reduce reliance of fossil fuel reserves. However, there is still no clear road-map for the socio-technological transition. While acknowledging economic impediments, this case study investigates social and political obstacles to bioethanol production from sugarcane in East Java, Indonesia. This study is based on Multi-Level Perspective and Technological Innovation System as integrated theoretical frameworks together with Political Ecology as an approach to get around the complexity of biofuels. Based on primary data, the research identifies several social and political obstacles to the bioethanol development. Indonesia’s sugar industry is facing many issues and therefore this study considers a reboot of the sector to be a prerequisite for bioethanol development in Indonesia. The research finds that many obstacles are related to lack of mobilisation of resources, and cooperation is found to be key in facilitating the bioethanol transformation in the particular context. The inconsistency of policies and legislations of sugar import, bioethanol targets and export regulations is evident, and can be traced to be hampered by lack of government commitment and top-down policy structure. For the socio-technological transition to take off, it is essential for all stakeholders involved to strive for sugar- and bioethanol industries to be integrated, through measures of more effective communication tools, multi-stakeholder participatory processes and incentives for collaboration. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Carlsson, Anna LU
supervisor
organization
course
UTVK03 20171
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
biofuels, bioethanol, sugarcane farming, sugar industry, socio-technological transition, Indonesia, East Java
language
English
id
8926279
date added to LUP
2017-10-11 16:42:25
date last changed
2017-10-11 16:42:25
@misc{8926279,
  abstract     = {{Indonesia has implemented national policies and legislations to encourage biofuel production as means to achieve energy security and self-sufficiency and to reduce reliance of fossil fuel reserves. However, there is still no clear road-map for the socio-technological transition. While acknowledging economic impediments, this case study investigates social and political obstacles to bioethanol production from sugarcane in East Java, Indonesia. This study is based on Multi-Level Perspective and Technological Innovation System as integrated theoretical frameworks together with Political Ecology as an approach to get around the complexity of biofuels. Based on primary data, the research identifies several social and political obstacles to the bioethanol development. Indonesia’s sugar industry is facing many issues and therefore this study considers a reboot of the sector to be a prerequisite for bioethanol development in Indonesia. The research finds that many obstacles are related to lack of mobilisation of resources, and cooperation is found to be key in facilitating the bioethanol transformation in the particular context. The inconsistency of policies and legislations of sugar import, bioethanol targets and export regulations is evident, and can be traced to be hampered by lack of government commitment and top-down policy structure. For the socio-technological transition to take off, it is essential for all stakeholders involved to strive for sugar- and bioethanol industries to be integrated, through measures of more effective communication tools, multi-stakeholder participatory processes and incentives for collaboration.}},
  author       = {{Carlsson, Anna}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Identifying social and political obstacles to bioethanol production from sugarcane in East Java, Indonesia}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}