Policies for climate change in the liong run: Wiring up the innovation system for eco-innovation
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Policies for climate change in the liong run : Wiring up the innovation system for eco-innovation. / Andersen, Maj Munch.
2008. Paper presented at DIME workshop "Innovation, sustainability and policy", Bordeaux, France.Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › Research
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TY - CONF
T1 - Policies for climate change in the liong run
T2 - DIME workshop "Innovation, sustainability and policy"
AU - Andersen, Maj Munch
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Policies for climate change have never received as much attention worldwide as now. At the same time another key policy trend is an increasing synthesis between environmental and innovation policy, a synthesis, it is here suggested, that is captured by the “eco-innovation” concept. This paper suggests that the innovation system frame based on evolutionary economic theory may guide the development of these new eco-innovation policies in important ways. The paper seeks to uncover the theoretical underpinnings and new rationales associated with these policies. The paper argues that the eco-innovation approach represents a shift in rationale from the traditional regulatory approach within environmental research and policy making towards an evolutionary market based approach to achieve climate and wider sustainability goals; not only in putting more emphasis on the market but also shifting the representation of the economy towards a more dynamic one. Rather than pursuing immediate environmental goals in climate policy making the paper suggests a long run policy for wiring up the national innovation system for ecoinnovation. This paper has claimed that a innovation systems perspective represents a potential new evolutionary environmental policy rationale in fundamentally viewing the economy as a long run process subjected to path- and time dependencies. The new rational is particularly clear in two ways: 1) In treating the company as (eco-)innovator rather than as polluter 2) In adapting a strong knowledge approach. The innovation system policy approach strives to mould the innovation system so as to make it easy and attractive to engage in eco-innovation for firms as well as knowledge institutions (and to lesser degree consumers). The five pillar strategy suggested reduces the friction to eco-innovation. There is however, a need to identify, through innovation system empirical analysis, the specific charactheristic and 2 innovation conditions as well as system failures to eco-innovation in the given innovation system. The innovation system frame is only beginning to be caught up in environmental analysis and mainly from the so-called “functional “ perspective; this paper suggests that the “organisational” approach is more needed. Overall, we need to link up micro-oriented innovation policy with the macro-oriented climate policy so as to align short run targets with the long run target of wiring up national innovation systems for eco-innovation.
AB - Policies for climate change have never received as much attention worldwide as now. At the same time another key policy trend is an increasing synthesis between environmental and innovation policy, a synthesis, it is here suggested, that is captured by the “eco-innovation” concept. This paper suggests that the innovation system frame based on evolutionary economic theory may guide the development of these new eco-innovation policies in important ways. The paper seeks to uncover the theoretical underpinnings and new rationales associated with these policies. The paper argues that the eco-innovation approach represents a shift in rationale from the traditional regulatory approach within environmental research and policy making towards an evolutionary market based approach to achieve climate and wider sustainability goals; not only in putting more emphasis on the market but also shifting the representation of the economy towards a more dynamic one. Rather than pursuing immediate environmental goals in climate policy making the paper suggests a long run policy for wiring up the national innovation system for ecoinnovation. This paper has claimed that a innovation systems perspective represents a potential new evolutionary environmental policy rationale in fundamentally viewing the economy as a long run process subjected to path- and time dependencies. The new rational is particularly clear in two ways: 1) In treating the company as (eco-)innovator rather than as polluter 2) In adapting a strong knowledge approach. The innovation system policy approach strives to mould the innovation system so as to make it easy and attractive to engage in eco-innovation for firms as well as knowledge institutions (and to lesser degree consumers). The five pillar strategy suggested reduces the friction to eco-innovation. There is however, a need to identify, through innovation system empirical analysis, the specific charactheristic and 2 innovation conditions as well as system failures to eco-innovation in the given innovation system. The innovation system frame is only beginning to be caught up in environmental analysis and mainly from the so-called “functional “ perspective; this paper suggests that the “organisational” approach is more needed. Overall, we need to link up micro-oriented innovation policy with the macro-oriented climate policy so as to align short run targets with the long run target of wiring up national innovation systems for eco-innovation.
M3 - Paper
Y2 - 11 September 2008 through 13 September 2008
ER -
ID: 368842287