The food-energy-climate change trilemma: developing a neo-Polanyian analysis

Find Similar History 34 Claim Ownership Request Data Change Add Favourite

Title
The food-energy-climate change trilemma: developing a neo-Polanyian analysis

CoPED ID
d1bae25f-0b9c-44dd-9d6a-d54a5b4ccf73

Status
Closed

Funders

Value
£941,012

Start Date
Dec. 31, 2013

End Date
April 29, 2017

Description

More Like This


The world is facing three historically unprecedented problems: anthropogenic climate change, the depletion of finite energy and material resources such as oil, and a growing population with increasing and changing demand for food. These three problems are deeply interconnected, combining together in 'the food-energy-climate change trilemma'. Understanding how this trilemma is developing in different parts of the world presents a challenge to social science. We need comparative and global sociological, political and economic analysis. One approach which is particularly fruitful develops two key ideas of Karl Polanyi: the shifting place of economy in society, and the propensity of market economies to self-destruct as a consequence of unbridled exploitation of nature. The Fellowship aims to develop this analytical approach to provide an integrated understanding of the global development of the trilemma that is innovative and informative to social and natural scientists, relevant to policy makers, and engages with the wider public.

It is now widely recognised that all forms of agricultural land use and conversion are major sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, two and a half times greater than global transport energy use. So, uncontrolled growth of agricultural production presents a significant risk for climate change. On the other hand, economies cannot run, let alone grow, without sustainable and adequate sources of energy. High oil prices during a global recession already point to the economic risk arising from depleting oil resources. The trilemma concept captures the interdependency between, one, the development of renewable energy alternatives to depleting and finite resources (fossil carbon fuels, 'peak oil') to meet growing energy demand; two, the growing demand for food both to meet rising standards and population growth; and three, the competition for land, and pressures to convert land for both food and energy, so accelerating global climate change. The world is increasingly subject to pressures to increase or diminish the risks of these conjoined economic and ecological crises. This complex challenge to mitigate anthropogenic climate change underpins Sir John Beddington's drive to develop a strategy for the 'sustainable intensification' of agriculture.

Different regions of the world, partly through natural endowments, partly through level of development, and partly through their economic and political systems, have both driven and responded very differently to trilemma challenges. The Fellowship research will compare differing trilemma dynamics in four regions: the USA, Europe, Brazil and China. It will do this by employing strategic food+energy crops as research probes into changing economic configurations, undertaking 150 in-depth interviews with stakeholders, policy-makers and experts. In this comparison, the research will highlight the critical tension between, on the one hand, varied pathways of transition to escape the horns of the trilemma, and, on the other, the extent and depth of technological, socio-economic, and indeed political lock-in, to the fossil carbon economy and high GHG-footprint agriculture. The research will seek to explain the different regional political and market actor responses to the trilemma challenges, and assess whether and how these are intensifying or diminishing the risks of economic crisis and damaging climate change. A neo-Polanyian analytical framework will develop the concept of 'instituted economic processes' to illuminate these critical changes in socio-economic organisation. The world is facing the stark alternatives of transition or fatal entrapment. By improving understanding of the socio-economic dynamics of the trilemma, social science can assume its responsibility in facing these challenges. The research process itself engages directly with policy-makers and shapers and aims for wider public engagement through publication and dissemination.


More Information

Potential Impact:
The Fellowship topic of climate change, land, energy and food demand is one of direct interest to a range of different actors, and promises a variety of societal impacts. It will build on the applicant's established connections with a number of key actors, both nationally and internationally.

The listing of beneficiaries is exemplary rather than exhaustive.

Key stakeholders
Who: BP Biofuels Division, British Sugar, Vivergo Fuels, Ensus, European Bioethanol Producers Association, European Biodiesel Board; BioSciences Knowledge Transfer Network, the National Non-Food Crops; Copersucar and Petrobras (Brazil)
Roundtables for Sustainable Palm Oil, for Sustainable Soy, and the Better Sugarcane Initiative.

How they will benefit: Engagement of key stakeholders in the research process (including workshops and the final conference) and production of tailored publications will deliver stakeholders a novel comparative global perspective to assist in their strategy making. Comparative analysis of the development of sustainability regulation will further inform stakeholders of the developing context within which they operate. The research will also assist in the evaluation of risks of pursuing different strategies in a global context.

Policy-makers
Who: UK: officials in Department of Environment Food and Rural Affairs; Department of Energy and Climate Change; Department for International Development, Department for Transport; Department of Business, Innovation and Skills (including Government Office for Science).
EU: officials from Directorates General for Environment, for Agriculture and Rural Development, for Transport and Energy, and for Health and Consumers.

How they will benefit: The engagement of policy-makers in the research process (including workshops and the final conference) and production of tailored publications will deliver a comparative global perspective on different policy orientations in different contexts. Raising policy-makers awareness of issues of climate change and competition for land, and the need to develop radical innovation strategies for a new and more beneficial agricultural revolution through 'sustainable intensification' is a central aim of the research process. For policy-makers the research outputs and engagement will assist them in rethinking innovation processes and the roles of international, state, market and non-governmental actors. Comparative analysis of the development of sustainability regulation will inform those engaged in sustainability regulation design, placing it in a global context where other regions are pursuing different regulatory strategies.

Policy-shapers and public perception
Who: Carbon Trust, environmental NGOs (WWF, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth), Oxfam

How will they benefit: Contributing to a shift in general public perception of the food-energy-climate change trilemma is a critical impact at the broadest level, entailing more integrated recognition of the linkage between the risks of economic and ecological crises. Changing perception of trilemma dynamics may challenge entrenched interests and agendas in a way critical to the further development of public opinion.

Mark Harvey PI_PER
Mark Harvey FELLOW_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Climate changes
  2. Sustainable development
  3. Energy policy
  4. Environmental effects
  5. Europe
  6. Societal change
  7. Economic crises
  8. Economic development
  9. Change
  10. Economic effects
  11. Environmental changes
  12. Agriculture
  13. Renewable energy sources
  14. Climate policy
  15. Climate
  16. Oil
  17. Emissions

Extracted key phrases
  1. Climate change trilemma
  2. Global climate change
  3. Anthropogenic climate change
  4. Damaging climate change
  5. Global transport energy use
  6. Food demand
  7. Critical change
  8. Energy demand
  9. Trilemma challenge
  10. Renewable energy alternative
  11. Finite energy
  12. Trilemma dynamic
  13. Trilemma concept
  14. Economic analysis
  15. Economic risk

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations