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  4. The acceleration of low-carbon transitions: Insights, concepts, challenges, and new directions for research
 
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2025
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Title

The acceleration of low-carbon transitions: Insights, concepts, challenges, and new directions for research

Abstract
Given that several low-carbon transitions are now accelerating, what can we say about the drivers, conditions, mechanisms, and dynamics of acceleration? This question is widely discussed in policy and academic circles, but so far there is little attempt to develop a more comprehensive answer that considers the pluralistic and heterogeneous nature of what acceleration is, how it comes about, and how it can be studied moving forward. To provide a more comprehensive approach to the phenomenon of acceleration, this paper offers a prismatic perspective that mobilizes insights from several social science disciplines and fields that have engaged with acceleration and links them to sustainability transitions. The objectives of the paper are threefold: to map out concepts or tools that are useful for better understanding or interpreting acceleration; to reflect on prominent themes and topics; and to identify research gaps and fruitful directions. Written by an interdisciplinary and authoritative team of authors, the paper draws from a wide range of concepts including but not limited to feedback theory from political science, incumbent reorientation and innovation races from business and management literature, cultural theory and public acceptance from socio-cultural studies, along with insights from consumption studies and sociology. It draws on this corpus to identify five singular dimensions of acceleration (economics, technology, business, policy, and behavior/culture) as well as four multi-dimensional mechanisms (tipping points, multi-system interactions, threshold dynamics and deep leverage points). It then examines underlying drivers and understandings of acceleration before synthesizing perspectives and charting directions for future research.
Author(s)
Sovacool, Benjamin K.
University of Sussex Business School
Geels, Frank W.
University of Manchester, Alliance Manchester Business School
Andersen, Allan Dahl
University of Copenhagen, Department of Food and Resource Economics
Grubb, Michael
The Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment, London
Jordan, Andrew J.
Kern, Florian
Institut für ökologische Wirtschaftsforschung
Kivimaa, Paula
Finnish Environment Institute
Lockwood, Matthew
University of Sussex, Science and Technology Policy Research  
Markard, Jochen
ETH Zürich
Meadowcroft, James
Carleton University
Meckling, Jonas
University of California, Harvard Business School
Moore, Brendan
Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels School of Governance
Raven, Rob
Monash University, Monash Sustainable Development Institute
Rogge, Karoline  
Fraunhofer-Institut für System- und Innovationsforschung ISI  
Rosenbloom, Daniel
Carleton University, School of Public Policy and Administration
Schmidt, Tobias S.
ETH Zürich, Energy and Technology Policy Group
Schot, Johan
Utrecht University, Utrecht Centre for Global Challenges
Sharp, Darren
Monash University, Monash Sustainable Development Institute
Stephenson, Janet
University of Otago
Vormedal, Irja
Fridtjof Nansen Institute
Yang, Kejia
University of Oslo, TIK Centre for Technology, Innovation and Culture
Journal
Energy research & social science  
Open Access
DOI
10.1016/j.erss.2025.103948
10.24406/publica-4361
File(s)
Sovacool_et_al_2025_The acceleration of low-carbon transitions.pdf (6.16 MB)
Rights
CC BY 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für System- und Innovationsforschung ISI  
Keyword(s)
  • Sustainability transitions

  • Acceleration

  • Innovation

  • Speed

  • Transformation

  • Systems change

  • Decarbonization

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