How aligned are industry strategy and government policy for the decarbonization of energy-intensive process industries?
Journal article, 2024

Decarbonization of energy-intensive process industries (EPIs) is a central unresolved challenge for limiting global warming to 1.5°C or well-below 2°C. In this article, we investigate the alignment between government policy and applicable industry strategy in decarbonization efforts across six European countries–Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom. We distinguish between ‘target alignment’ (How comparable are the size of the emission reduction commitments?), ‘temporal alignment’ (How closely do the timelines match?) and ‘solution alignment’ (Are the same types of solutions prioritized?). Based on an analysis of national policy documents, company strategies of the 10 largest emitting EPI plants in each country, as well as secondary sources, we find high target alignment. However, we find substantially lower temporal alignment as emitters are reluctant to commit to intermediate targets that match the decarbonization timelines laid out in national government policy. Solution alignment is intermediate across all six countries as emitters generally pursue the decarbonization options prioritized in policy, but with most emitters remaining at the level of ambitions or plans and few examples of commercial investments so far.

policy

policy alignment

Decarbonization

industry strategy

sustainability transitions

energy-intensive process industry

Author

Teis Hansen

University of Copenhagen

SINTEF Digital

Johnn Andersson

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Jørgen Finstad

University of Oslo

Jens Hanson

SINTEF Digital

Hans Hellsmark

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Tuukka Mäkitie

University of Oslo

SINTEF Digital

Amber Nordholm

Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

Markus Steen

SINTEF Digital

Climate Policy

1469-3062 (ISSN) 1752-7457 (eISSN)

Vol. 24 9 1149-1162

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1080/14693062.2024.2363490

More information

Latest update

10/17/2024