Dynamic Modelling of Energy Transitions Using a Coupled Modelling-Narrative Approach
Views
0% 0
Downloads
0 0%

Open access
Citation
Enayat A. Moallemi, Fjalar de Haan, Biju Alummoottil George, John Webb, Lu Aye. (3/12/2015). Dynamic Modelling of Energy Transitions Using a Coupled Modelling-Narrative Approach. Gold Coast, Australia.
Abstract
Energy transitions are a matter of competitions between multiple emerging systems and a
dominant, established system. Understanding the complex dynamics of these interactions can assist betterinformed
decision making and policy interventions. This paper presents a coupled modelling-narrative
approach, consisting of a System Dynamics (SD) model interlinked with a narrative transitions-theoretical
framework. The approach is geared at understanding the dynamics of emerging on-grid electricity sources,
such as renewables, in power sector transitions.
The value of implementing such a coupled approach is twofold. Firstly, it empowers the SD modelling
process. As SD modelling itself is agnostic to the conceptualisation of the (societal) system under study, it is
left to the modeller to design an appropriate SD structure – i.e. Causal Loop Diagram. The approach
presented in this paper provides a narrative theoretical framework based on the state-of-the-art of
Sustainability Transitions literature and a generic SD model (applicable to similar energy transition cases)
which directly translates the key concepts and dynamical hypotheses. The theoretical framework enables the
creation of highly structured narratives that not only provide a clear overview of the case, but also assist the
identification of case specific boundary conditions, parameters, feedback loops and therefore in setting up
and validating the SD model. Secondly, the close connection between the narrative theoretical framework
and the SD model enables considerable explanatory power that cannot be obtained from simply using a
model or a narrative. Where the narrative case description, for example, outlines the developments following
a certain policy intervention, the SD model allows interrogating the detailed interactions of the chain of
causes and consequences following the intervention. SD models are able to represent and reproduce complex
causal relations including feedbacks, non-linearity, threshold effects and time delays – dynamics which are
impracticable to analyse with human mental models alone.
This paper presents how the SD model is structured based on the core concepts of the narrative theoretical
framework. Examples from an existing application by the authors of the framework on the case of the
emergence of on-grid solar electricity in India are used to illustrate how the coupling of the SD model with
the narrative theory helps addressing questions going beyond modelling or narrative analysis in isolation
Permanent link
DOI
Other URI
AGROVOC Keyword(s)
Author(s) ORCID(s)
George, Biju Alummoottil https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8427-3350