Editorial: Social dimensions of energy system change in a disrupted world
Date
Authors
Colvin, Rebecca
Ross, Helen
Baldwin, Claudia
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Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand
Abstract
As Australia, New Zealand, and much of the world live under home isolation to contain the
spread of COVID-19, attention is turning to short term environmental responses to the
sudden changes in human behaviour, and implications for global dealings with the climate
emergency. Reductions in energy usage are among the changes already apparent. Air and
road transportation has reduced drastically, so cities no longer have their usual traffic jams
(Knight 2020). Photographs of clear skies over Beijing, Kathmandu and many other cities
offer visual reminder of the benefits of sudden declines in air pollution. Press and magazine
commentaries also speculate whether people’s lifestyles will change towards living more
simply, as people experience living with less, shopping locally, cooking at home, new levels
of neighbourly support, and much more time with immediate family. There is further antici-
pation of structural changes, with discussion of a proportion of employers and workers main-
taining much more working from home than in the past, as advantages are experienced (Ross
2020). Thus the enforced social changes required to contend with the pandemic may well offer
an opportunity for redirection of national economies and lifestyles and with them energy usage
and opportunities to address climate change, in recovery (Rosenbloom and Markard 2020).
Meanwhile, governments are listening to experts – and putting them in the forefront of
public announcements – to an unprecedented degree. Optimists hope this will make a pre-
cedent for heeding climate scientists in addressing the climate emergency (Farhart 2020).
Changes in energy usage, and sources, are already being measured. The International
Energy Agency (2020) has analysed recent daily data from 30 countries representing over
two-thirds of global energy demand. It calculates that countries in full lockdown are experien-
cing an average 25 per cent decline in energy demand per week and those in partial lockdown
an average 18 per cent decline. Global CO2 emissions are expected to decrease by eight per
cent over 2020. During the ‘lockdown’ period renewable energy has experienced growth in
demand, while coal and oil have experienced sharp drops (IEA 2020).
Energy futures are very much part of debates associated with the massive world changes
arising from COVID-19. Experts including Australia’s former Liberal Party Leader and
Shadow Treasurer Prof. Hewson has argued ‘there is every reason to expect that the virus
crisis will strengthen and accelerate the imperative to transition to a low-carbon world by
mid-century’ (Hewson 2020). The Australian Prime Minister, however, has been mentioning
coal amongst economic strategies, and activists fear reduced parliamentary function in Austra-
lia in 2020 will limit scrutiny.
This issue focuses on a special collection on wind energy, guest edited by Rebecca Colvin
and Ian Boothroyd, two articles on organisational change and the electricity sector, and two
articles on information for environmental monitoring, both focused on water and catchments.
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Australasian Journal of Environmental Management
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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