Project Details
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Green building in regional strategies for sustainability: multi-actor governance and innovative building technologies in Europe, Australia, and Canada (GreenRegio)

Subject Area Human Geography
Term from 2013 to 2018
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 224227916
 
With growing concerns and evidence regarding global climate change, ideas of sustainability have increasingly influenced and guided conceptual and policy debates on economic development worldwide. Policy goals to lower greenhouse gas emissions have been captured in a number of international agreements like the Kyoto protocol as well as multinational and national initiatives including the EU sustainable development strategy, Canada’s Federal Sustainable Development Strategy and Australia’s National Strategy for Ecologically Sustainable Development. Most recently, UNEP’s Green Economy Report (2011) provides a global assessment emphasizing the greening of economies as ‘new engine of growth’ that meets environmental, economic and social goals (e.g., employment creation, poverty reduction). The building sector, discussed in a separate chapter in the UNEP report, has been identified as significant in reducing greenhouse gas emissions. While it is the largest contributor to human-related greenhouse gas emissions, it is also seen as holding greatest potential to lower emissions based on the low cost of retrofitting existing or constructing new buildings, the availability of technologies, and transition to green energy supply and demand. Despite the global character of environmental change, the local and regional scales are often identified as important arenas to tackle the challenges of sustainable development. Sustainable local and regional development research has focused on sustainable solutions including green technologies, institutional restructuring and transportation management, just to name a few, often neglecting considerations on how local or regional development is defined in the first place. An analysis of local and regional development has to take into account not only different spatial scales but also a multitude of interests. Similarly, work on the greening of industry, technological change, and green innovations has frequently over-emphasized the importance of economic actors neglecting other important interests and how they are connected at different geographic scales. Recent work has promoted political economy and institutional perspectives to overcome these shortcomings. The proposed research project focuses on green building as regional strategy for sustainability using examples from Europe (Luxembourg and Freiburg), Australia (Brisbane), and Canada (Vancouver). It seeks to contribute to understanding sustainable local and regional development in respect to technological change and innovations implementing a holistic and institutional approach that takes into account multiple interests and spatial scales. The project focuses on the interactions between economic, government, and non-government interests at different spatial scales, and how these interactions potentially translate into 'local and regional innovation systems', or how they promote or hinder technological change. The chosen perspective looks beyond the business level to analyse local and regional institutions (regional context incl. norms, value systems, beliefs) that promote technological innovations and how they are influenced by external events.
DFG Programme Research Grants
International Connection Luxembourg
Participating Person Professor Dr. Christian Schulz
 
 

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