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
Invisible Energy Policy References
Reference page for the DEMAND Dictionary entry: Invisible Energy Policy. For the full dictionary, click here. 1. DEMAND Animated Video Series - Episode 5: Using Non Energy Policies to Reduce Demand 2. Research Insight:How Do Invisible‘Non-Energy Policies’ Shape Energy Demand 3. Research Insight: Pathways of Change - Cool Biz and the Reconditioning of Office Energy Demand
View full post →Innovation References
Reference page for the DEMAND Dictionary entry: Innovation. For the full dictionary, click here. 1. Morley, J. (2014) Size is everything at Christmas and your oven is no exception. The Conversation. Ovens are designed and optimised for roasting large birds. As a result, they are typically oversized for regular use – making their total energy consumption greater than necessary. And…
View full post →Infrastructuration References
Reference page for the DEMAND Dictionary entry: Infrastructuration. For the full dictionary, click here. 1. DEMAND Animated Video Series - Episode 3: How Do Infrastructures Make Energy Demand? 2. De Decker, K (October 2017) Where Infrastructures and Appliances Meet Where Infrastructures and Appliances Meet 3. Shove, E., Watson, M. & Spurling, N. (2015) 'Conceptualising…
View full post →Flexibility References
Reference page for the DEMAND Dictionary entry: Flexibility. For the full dictionary, click here. 1. Torriti, J., Druckman, A., Anderson, B., Yeboah, G. and Hanna, R. (2015) 'Peak Residential Electricity Demand and Social Practices: Deriving Flexibility and Greenhouse Gas Intensities from Time Use and Locational Data'. Indoor and Built Environment, 24(7): 891-912. DOI:…
View full post →First, Second and Third Order Demand References
Reference page for the DEMAND Dictionary entry: First, Second and Third Order Demand. For the full dictionary, click here. 1. Rinkinen, J., Jalas, M. and Shove, E. (2015) Object Relations in Accounts of Everyday Life, Sociology, 49(5): 870-885. DOI: 10.1177/0038038515577910
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