Journal Article - Energy Policy
Technological Innovation in the Energy Sector: R&D, Deployment, and Learning-by-Doing
Abstract
Technological innovation is fundamental for rendering the energy economy cleaner and more efficient with concomitant economic, developmental, and environmental benefits. This paper discusses aspects of R&D and ‘learning-by-doing,’ the main contributors to technological change that are complementary yet inter-linked. The relationship between the level of national energy R&D investments and changes in the trajectory of the country's energy system is complex; targeted efforts to promote deployment of new energy technologies play a major role in translating the results of R&D activities to changes in the energy system. Learning-by-doing is an important element of deployment, but it remains largely poorly understood. Hence this phenomenon needs to be ‘unpacked’ and its various aspects analyzed in detail, so as to allow better design of early deployment efforts to enhance learning gains. This paper highlights how public R&D and deployment efforts must work in tandem to expand the portfolio, and realize the potential, of new and improved energy technologies.
The full text of the article can be accessed from the Energy Policy website (.pdf).
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For Academic Citation:
Sagar, Ambuj and Bob van der Zwaan. “Technological Innovation in the Energy Sector: R&D, Deployment, and Learning-by-Doing.” Energy Policy, vol. 34. no. 17. (November 2006): 2601-2608 .
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Abstract
Technological innovation is fundamental for rendering the energy economy cleaner and more efficient with concomitant economic, developmental, and environmental benefits. This paper discusses aspects of R&D and ‘learning-by-doing,’ the main contributors to technological change that are complementary yet inter-linked. The relationship between the level of national energy R&D investments and changes in the trajectory of the country's energy system is complex; targeted efforts to promote deployment of new energy technologies play a major role in translating the results of R&D activities to changes in the energy system. Learning-by-doing is an important element of deployment, but it remains largely poorly understood. Hence this phenomenon needs to be ‘unpacked’ and its various aspects analyzed in detail, so as to allow better design of early deployment efforts to enhance learning gains. This paper highlights how public R&D and deployment efforts must work in tandem to expand the portfolio, and realize the potential, of new and improved energy technologies.
The full text of the article can be accessed from the Energy Policy website (.pdf).
Want to Read More?
The full text of this publication is available via the original publication source.- Recommended
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Video - SNF Agora Institute
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Most Viewed
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