A new dawn for (oil) incumbents within the bioeconomy? Trade-offs and lessons for policy
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2020

This paper develops a more detailed understanding of when incumbent actors may become the main locomotive driving energy transitions. It also illustrates the trade-offs between policy approaches that actively seek to involve the incumbents in transitions, and policy approaches that pursue transitions without their active involvement. The paper examines state support for the bioeconomy in Sweden and concludes that public investments have been geared towards large-scale, complex and integrated biorefineries that are dependent on the active participation of the forest industry. Incumbents in the forest industry have, however, both lacked motivation and the abilities required to take the necessary steps for commercialisation of the demonstrated concepts. Instead, a rather small investment in a joint venture between actors from the forestry and oil refinery industry in Sweden has spurred learning and revenues; and it has placed an oil refinery at the centre of the future development of what we here term distributed biorefining. The main trade-off is that while this shift has opened up for cross-industrial collaborations and the production of advanced biofuels and materials, it has also paved the way for further investments in existing fossil-fuel infrastructure.

Incumbents

Infrastructure

Distributed biorefinery

Energy transition

Bioeconomy

Oil industry

Författare

Hans Hellsmark

Chalmers, Teknikens ekonomi och organisation, Environmental Systems Analysis

Teis Hansen

Lunds universitet

Sintef Foundation for Scientific and Industrial Research At the Norwegian Institute of Technology

Energy Policy

0301-4215 (ISSN)

Vol. 145 111763

Ämneskategorier

Ekonomisk historia

Tvärvetenskapliga studier

Ekonomisk geografi

DOI

10.1016/j.enpol.2020.111763

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Senast uppdaterat

2021-02-17