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| topics:readiness [2026/03/21 00:29] – Status: in-review admin | topics:readiness [2026/04/13 10:06] (current) – o.sachs | ||
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| - | < | + | <WRAP catbadge |
| - | status: in-review | + | |
| </ | </ | ||
| ====== Readiness ====== | ====== Readiness ====== | ||
| - | version: 1.1 | ||
| - | updated: March 2026 | ||
| <WRAP meta> | <WRAP meta> | ||
| Line 11: | Line 8: | ||
| contributors: | contributors: | ||
| reviewers: [Names] | reviewers: [Names] | ||
| + | version: 1.2 | ||
| + | updated: 25 March 2026 | ||
| sensitivity: | sensitivity: | ||
| + | status: in-review | ||
| + | ai-use: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) was used for editorial revision, reference verification, | ||
| </ | </ | ||
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| ===== Why this matters ===== | ===== Why this matters ===== | ||
| - | Readiness assessment helps decision-makers evaluate whether a technology, solution, or broader approach is prepared for deployment, scaling, or systemic integration. While Technology Readiness Levels (TRL) track engineering maturity, smart grid transitions expose the "deployment gap"—where components are technically ready but institutional or societal conditions are underdeveloped.((Webster, | + | Readiness assessment helps decision-makers evaluate whether a technology, solution, or broader approach is prepared for deployment, scaling, or systemic integration. While Technology Readiness Levels (TRL) track engineering maturity, smart grid transitions expose the deployment gap — where components are technically ready but institutional or societal conditions are underdeveloped.((Webster, |
| <WRAP callout> | <WRAP callout> | ||
| - | Readiness is not a single value but a set of actor-specific tests. It involves moving from an emphasis on the supply-side | + | Readiness is not a single value but a set of actor-specific tests. It involves moving from an emphasis on the supply-side |
| </ | </ | ||
| - | To identify bottlenecks, | + | To identify bottlenecks, |
| - | Will it work? → Technology, Institutional, | + | ===== Shared definitions ===== |
| - | Will anyone want it? → Societal, Demand, and Market Readiness. | + | Readiness describes the degree to which a configuration is prepared for application across specific frameworks. These frameworks are orthogonal rather than sequential — a high score in one does not presuppose readiness in another.((Webster, A., & Gardner, J. (2019). Aligning technology |
| - | Will it contribute to long-term societal goals? → Transformative | + | <WRAP tablecap> |
| + | **Table 1.** Readiness | ||
| + | </WRAP> | ||
| - | ===== ISGAN definition ===== | + | ^ Framework ^ Core question ^ Purpose ^ |
| + | | **Technology (TRL)** | How mature is the engineering? | ||
| + | | **Institutional (IR)** | Are the rules in place? | Assessing the regulatory, organisational, | ||
| + | | **Societal (SRL)** | Will society accept it? | Driving innovation by societal needs, values, and inclusive processes. | | ||
| + | | **System (SyR)** | Is infrastructure ready? | Assessing grid standards, data architecture, | ||
| + | | **Organisational (ORL)** | Can the entity adopt it? | Evaluating professional roles, skills, and internal governance. | | ||
| + | | **Scaling** | Can it grow beyond pilots? | Monitoring the implementation process and adaptive management. | | ||
| - | Readiness describes the degree to which a configuration is prepared for application across specific frameworks. These frameworks are orthogonal rather than sequential; a high score in one does not presuppose | + | <WRAP tablecap> |
| + | **Table 2.** Key terms in readiness | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ^ Term ^ Definition ^ | ||
| + | | **Deployment gap** | The difference between technical maturity | ||
| + | | **Institutional workability** | The capacity of a technology to function within specific socio-technical infrastructures, including laws, routines, and actor networks. | | ||
| + | | **Regulatory sandbox** | A time-limited mechanism allowing innovations to operate under modified rules to generate evidence for both technical and regulatory compatibility. | | ||
| + | | **Bankability** | A state where a technology | ||
| + | | **Socio-technical assemblage** | The combination | ||
| + | {{ : | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP figure> | ||
| + | **Figure 1.** Scaling readiness: action-oriented support for multi-stakeholder processes.\\ | ||
| + | //Source: Sartas et al. (2020).((Sartas, M., et al. (2020). //Scaling readiness: Concepts, practices, and implementation.// International Potato Center (CIP).))// | ||
| + | </ | ||
| - | ^ Framework ^ Core question ^ Purpose / Characteristic ^ | ||
| - | | Technology (TRL) | How mature is the engineering? | ||
| - | | Institutional (IR) | Are the rules in place? | Assessing the regulatory, organisational, | ||
| - | | Societal (SRL) | Will society accept it? | Driving innovation by societal needs, values, and inclusive processes. | | ||
| - | | System (SyR) | Is infrastructure ready? | Assessing grid standards, data architecture, | ||
| - | | Organisational (ORL) | Can the entity adopt it? | Evaluating professional roles, skills, and internal governance. | | ||
| - | | Scaling | Can it grow beyond pilots? | Monitoring the implementation process and adaptive management. | | ||
| - | {{: | ||
| ===== Perspectives ===== | ===== Perspectives ===== | ||
| Line 53: | Line 69: | ||
| <WRAP perspectives> | <WRAP perspectives> | ||
| - | ==== Actors ==== | + | ==== Actors |
| - | Actors differ in which dimensions of readiness constrain their decisions. For research funders, | + | Actors differ in which dimensions of readiness constrain their decisions. For research funders, |
| - | {{:picture2.png?600|The Societal Readiness Thinking Tool: A resource for maturing | + | <WRAP figure> |
| + | {{ :topics: | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Figure 2.** Stage-gate model of Societal Readiness Thinking Tool.\\ | ||
| + | //Source: Bernstein et al. (2022).((Bernstein, | ||
| + | </ | ||
| <WRAP case> | <WRAP case> | ||
| - | EU -- Horizon Europe Cluster 5 \ | + | **EU -- Horizon Europe Cluster 5** \\ |
| - | Piloting the integration of societal readiness assessment into research | + | Piloting the integration of societal readiness assessment into research |
| </ | </ | ||
| - | ==== Technology | + | ==== Technologies and infrastructure |
| - | While TRL provides a structured path for hardware, it assumes | + | While TRL provides a structured path for hardware, it assumes context is a fixed state. Organisational |
| - | {{:picture1.png? | + | <WRAP figure> |
| + | {{picture1.png? | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Figure 3.** Organisational Readiness Level (ORL) as a technology-neutral maturity model.\\ | ||
| + | //Source: Bruno et al. (2020).((Bruno, I., et al. (2020). Technology readiness revisited: A proposal for extending the scope of impact assessment of European public services. //ICEGOV 2020//, 369–380. https:// | ||
| + | </ | ||
| <WRAP case> | <WRAP case> | ||
| - | Australia -- ARENA CRI \ | + | **Australia -- ARENA Commercial Readiness Index** \\ |
| ARENA uses the Commercial Readiness Index (CRI) to evaluate when a technology transitions from being technically feasible to becoming a bankable asset class capable of obtaining commercial financing. While TRL ends at demonstration, | ARENA uses the Commercial Readiness Index (CRI) to evaluate when a technology transitions from being technically feasible to becoming a bankable asset class capable of obtaining commercial financing. While TRL ends at demonstration, | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP figure> | ||
| + | {{ : | ||
| - | {{: | + | **Figure 4.** Linking TRL and CRI: the journey from research to commercial bankability.\\ |
| + | //Source: ARENA (2014).((ARENA. (2014). // | ||
| </ | </ | ||
| - | ==== Institutional ==== | + | ==== Institutional |
| - | Institutional | + | Institutional |
| - | {{:picture3.png? | + | <WRAP figure> |
| + | {{picture3.png? | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Figure 5.** IR/TRL alignment: asking workability questions at developmental gates.\\ | ||
| + | //Source: Webster & Gardner | ||
| + | </ | ||
| <WRAP case> | <WRAP case> | ||
| - | Austria -- Energie.Frei.Raum \ | + | **Austria -- Energie.Frei.Raum** \\ |
| - | A regulatory sandbox framework designed to bridge the gap between technology and institutional readiness. It allows for testing tariff models and market rules under controlled experimental conditions before permanent legislation.((Veseli, | + | A regulatory sandbox framework designed to bridge the gap between technology and institutional readiness. It allows for testing tariff models and market rules under controlled experimental conditions before permanent legislation.((Veseli, |
| - | </ | + | |
| </ | </ | ||
| - | ===== Key Terms ===== | + | </ |
| - | + | ||
| - | ^ Term ^ Definition ^ | + | |
| - | | Deployment gap | The difference between technical maturity (TRL) and readiness for deployment, arising when institutional or societal dimensions lag. | | + | |
| - | | Institutional workability | The capacity of a technology to function within specific socio-technical infrastructures, | + | |
| - | | Regulatory sandbox | A time-limited mechanism allowing innovations to operate under modified rules to generate evidence for both technical and regulatory compatibility. | | + | |
| - | | Bankability | A state where a technology has demonstrated sufficient commercial readiness (CRI) to be considered low-risk for standard commercial financing. | | + | |
| - | | Socio-technical assemblage | The combination of hardware, rules, user practices, and infrastructures that must co-evolve for a transition to succeed. | | + | |
| ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== | ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== | ||
| <WRAP distinction> | <WRAP distinction> | ||
| - | Supply-side vs. User-side Readiness | + | **Supply-side vs. user-side readiness** \\ |
| - | TRL is fundamentally a supply-side, | + | TRL is fundamentally a supply-side, |
| </ | </ | ||
| <WRAP distinction> | <WRAP distinction> | ||
| - | Level-based vs. Stage-gate Assessment | + | **Level-based vs. stage-gate assessment** \\ |
| - | Some frameworks (TRL, SRL) use discrete numbers (1-9) to imply a linear progression. Others | + | Some frameworks (TRL, SRL) use discrete numbers (1–9) to imply a linear progression. Others use stage-gate or orthogonal categories to reflect that readiness dimensions interact recursively rather than sequentially. |
| </ | </ | ||
| - | ===== References | + | ===== Related topics |
| - | + | ||
| - | Aigner, E., et al. (2022). //Kapitel IV: Technical Summary.// In APCC Special Report: Strukturen Für Ein Klimafreundliches Leben. Springer Spektrum. https:// | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | ARENA. (2014). // | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Bernstein, M. J., et al. (2022). //The Societal Readiness Thinking Tool: A Practical Resource for Maturing the Societal Readiness of Research Projects.// Science and Engineering Ethics, 28(1), 6. https:// | + | |
| - | Bruno, I., et al. (2020). // | + | [[topics: |
| - | + | ||
| - | European Commission. (2023). //Societal readiness: Integration in Horizon Europe Cluster 5 [Concept paper].// European Commission. | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Innovation Fund Denmark. (2019). //Societal Readiness Levels (SRL).// https:// | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Kubeczko, K. (2022). // | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Sartas, M., et al. (2020). //Scaling readiness: Concepts, practices, and implementation.// | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Veseli, A., et al. (2021). //Practical necessity and legal options for introducing energy regulatory sandboxes in Austria.// Utilities Policy, 73, 101296. https:// | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Webster, A., & Gardner, J. (2019). //Aligning technology and institutional readiness: The adoption of innovation.// | + | |
| - | + | ||
| - | ===== Related | + | |
| - | {{tag> | ||