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A framework for analyzing deployment of solar photovoltaics, with a focus on building-sited grid-connected systems

Palm, Alvar LU and Neij, Lena LU (2012) IST 2012 - International Conference on Sustainability Transitions
Abstract
Policy intervention schemes for increased deployment of solar photovoltaics (PV) have been launched in several countries, with varying success. In order to ensure an efficient deployment of the technology, thorough knowledge is needed about relevant present actors and institutions, and about how a desirable actor base and institutional setup should look like; mere cost reductions are not enough to guarantee deployment of a new technology. A framework that captures the systemic nature of technical change, i.e. the development and deployment of new technology, is the technological innovation systems (TIS) framework. The objective of this paper is to discuss how the TIS framework could be used to analyze policy for PV with a focus on... (More)
Policy intervention schemes for increased deployment of solar photovoltaics (PV) have been launched in several countries, with varying success. In order to ensure an efficient deployment of the technology, thorough knowledge is needed about relevant present actors and institutions, and about how a desirable actor base and institutional setup should look like; mere cost reductions are not enough to guarantee deployment of a new technology. A framework that captures the systemic nature of technical change, i.e. the development and deployment of new technology, is the technological innovation systems (TIS) framework. The objective of this paper is to discuss how the TIS framework could be used to analyze policy for PV with a focus on deployment of grid-connected, building-sited PV systems. So far, little emphasis has been on using TIS for detailed analysis of deployment of new emerging energy technologies. The TIS framework has been used for analyzing market growth of new energy technologies including processes of deployment in parallel with processes of technology development and production. We argue that “upstream” parts of the PV value chain differ fundamentally from “downstream” parts in that “upstream” activities (e.g. production of purified silicon, wafers, and solar cells) can often be understood as pertaining to a global TIS, while “downstream” activities (system installation etc.) could generally be assumed to be part of a more local (or national) TIS, and we identify and discuss components and processes of the TIS that are of particular importance for deployment of PV. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
keywords
Technological innovation systems (TIS), solar photovoltaics (PV), technological change, renewable energy.
conference name
IST 2012 - International Conference on Sustainability Transitions
conference dates
2012-08-29 - 2012-08-31
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
34b31e4f-50ac-4fad-99ff-87ebbd812cb4 (old id 3602644)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:42:25
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:15:45
@misc{34b31e4f-50ac-4fad-99ff-87ebbd812cb4,
  abstract     = {{Policy intervention schemes for increased deployment of solar photovoltaics (PV) have been launched in several countries, with varying success. In order to ensure an efficient deployment of the technology, thorough knowledge is needed about relevant present actors and institutions, and about how a desirable actor base and institutional setup should look like; mere cost reductions are not enough to guarantee deployment of a new technology. A framework that captures the systemic nature of technical change, i.e. the development and deployment of new technology, is the technological innovation systems (TIS) framework. The objective of this paper is to discuss how the TIS framework could be used to analyze policy for PV with a focus on deployment of grid-connected, building-sited PV systems. So far, little emphasis has been on using TIS for detailed analysis of deployment of new emerging energy technologies. The TIS framework has been used for analyzing market growth of new energy technologies including processes of deployment in parallel with processes of technology development and production. We argue that “upstream” parts of the PV value chain differ fundamentally from “downstream” parts in that “upstream” activities (e.g. production of purified silicon, wafers, and solar cells) can often be understood as pertaining to a global TIS, while “downstream” activities (system installation etc.) could generally be assumed to be part of a more local (or national) TIS, and we identify and discuss components and processes of the TIS that are of particular importance for deployment of PV.}},
  author       = {{Palm, Alvar and Neij, Lena}},
  keywords     = {{Technological innovation systems (TIS); solar photovoltaics (PV); technological change; renewable energy.}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{A framework for analyzing deployment of solar photovoltaics, with a focus on building-sited grid-connected systems}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/6185624/3602756.pdf}},
  year         = {{2012}},
}