Understanding Demand
Influencing Demand
Policies for steering demand
Invisible energy policy
Adapting social practices
Commission on Travel Demand
How Demand Varies
Situations, Sites, Sectors
Domestic IT use
Home heating
Offices and office work
Business travel
Online shopping
Car dependence
Older people and mobile lives
Local smart grids
Cooking and cooling in Asia
Energy, Justice and Poverty
energy
Working paper 18: The Dynamics of Demand: thinking about steering
Working Paper 18: Louise Reardon, Greg Marsden and Elizabeth Shove, April 2016. This was a discussion paper for participants in the change and steering stream of the DEMAND conference, April 2016
View full post →Working paper 17: The Dynamics of Demand: methods and concepts for thinking about change
Working Paper 17: Stanley Blue, Janine Morley, Greg Marsden and Elizabeth Shove, April 2016. This was a discussion paper for participants in the change and steering stream of the DEMAND conference, April 2016
View full post →Dragon breath and snow melt: Sensory experience, know-how and keeping homes warm. Sarah Royston
What does it mean to know about energy? Since energy is invisible various devices are required to reveal it and make it knowable (meters; or thermometers to measure the effect of energy consumption for temperature). Different issues arise if we switch focus and ask about the kind of knowing involved in doing things that use energy (operating central heating, collecting and burning wood,…
View full post →How can the UK afford an energy system? Mike Colechin
Mike presented to our largest audience yet, with more watching the live stream online. He took on big questions about the future of the UK energy system, focused in particular on questions of affordability and the need to reconcile these somehow with both sustainability and energy security (the energy policy ‘trilemma’). (more…)
View full post →All this talk about lights hides bigger energy challenges
By Allison Hui, Lancaster University and Elizabeth Shove, Lancaster University Originally published in (more…)
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