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The urban material politics of decarbonization in Stockholm, London and San Francisco

Tozer, Laura

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Authors

Laura Tozer



Abstract

This paper examines the implementation of carbon governance initiatives targeting urban buildings and energy infrastructure and uses a material politics approach to evaluate whether these practices are triggering trajectories towards decarbonization. Urban low carbon transitions suggest a substantial re-ordering of urban infrastructure. However, there is a critical need to engage with the material implications of low carbon practices since research so far has painted a picture of incremental ambitions struggling in implementation. This paper interrogates how carbon governance is implemented through urban buildings and energy systems, and the implications for urban decarbonization, by drawing on three urban case studies: Stockholm, London and San Francisco. The analysis draws on interviews with representatives from government, industry, utilities, building owners, and non-governmental organizations who are striving to achieve decarbonization in their cities. Patterns are emerging in what is being made to matter politically through the translation of carbon governance into building-energy infrastructure. In particular, the paper finds that (1) a short-term decision making timeline encourages action that incrementally reduces greenhouse gas emissions without fundamentally overcoming carbon lock-in, (2) actors are harnessing exceptional urban space to overcome the tyranny of cost-effectiveness in maintaining fossil fuel entrenchment (with concerning implications for justice and uneven development), (3) there is a pattern of individualization of responsibility for decarbonization, and (4) material politics are limiting the application of low carbon retrofits for the existing built form. Overall, this paper examines the implementation of urban carbon governance while encompassing the messy, materially embedded, and contested nature of infrastructure transformations.

Citation

Tozer, L. (2019). The urban material politics of decarbonization in Stockholm, London and San Francisco. Geoforum, 102, 106-115. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2019.03.020

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 26, 2019
Online Publication Date Apr 30, 2019
Publication Date Jun 30, 2019
Deposit Date Apr 26, 2019
Publicly Available Date Apr 6, 2021
Journal Geoforum
Print ISSN 0016-7185
Electronic ISSN 1872-9398
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 102
Pages 106-115
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2019.03.020
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1332264

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