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| + | <WRAP catbadge blue> | ||
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| + | ====== Systems ====== | ||
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| + | <WRAP meta> | ||
| + | lead-authors: | ||
| + | contributors: | ||
| + | reviewers: [Names] | ||
| + | version: 2.0 | ||
| + | updated: 19 March 2026 | ||
| + | sensitivity: | ||
| + | ai-disclosure: | ||
| + | status: development | ||
| + | short-desc: Conceptual frameworks for understanding energy systems as socio-technical, | ||
| + | </ | ||
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| + | <WRAP intro> | ||
| + | Systems thinking applies concepts of interdependence, | ||
| + | </ | ||
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| + | Energy systems are not simply technical objects with well-defined components. They are sociotechnical configurations in which physical infrastructure, | ||
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| + | <WRAP callout> | ||
| + | Disciplines see systems in different ways - as open or closed, as static or dynamic and evolving. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | ===== Energy systems as socio-technical configurations ===== | ||
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| + | Socio-technical systems are defined as the linkages between elements necessary to fulfil societal functions.((Geels, | ||
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| + | This co-evolution is stabilising and constraining simultaneously. It enables reliable provision at scale, but also produces path dependency and lock-in, where existing technologies, | ||
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| + | A layered functional reading complements this. Rather than treating energy as a single integrated whole, it distinguishes: | ||
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| + | * **Resources** — fossil fuels, wind, solar, nuclear | ||
| + | * **Production** — centralised generation, transformation, | ||
| + | * **Logistics** — transmission, | ||
| + | * **End-use** — people, industry, transport/ | ||
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| + | Cutting across all layers are supporting capacities (R&I, education) and supporting infrastructures (transport, ICT). This view makes visible how interventions at one layer propagate to others and where systemic dependencies concentrate. | ||
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| + | ===== The smart grid as a cyber-physical system ===== | ||
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| + | A cyber-physical system (CPS) combines physical processes with embedded computation, | ||
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| + | <WRAP callout> | ||
| + | The distinguishing feature of the smart grid is the addition of two-way communication alongside two-way power flow, which is both its main capability and its main vulnerability. | ||
| + | </ | ||
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| + | NIST's smart grid conceptual model identifies seven functional domains, such as bulk generation, transmission, | ||
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| + | ===== Innovation systems and the energy transition ===== | ||
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| + | The technological innovation systems (TIS) approach analyses how new energy technologies emerge and challenge incumbents through seven system functions: knowledge development and diffusion, entrepreneurial experimentation, | ||
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| + | An **innovation ecosystem** frames this relationally: | ||
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| + | Both complement the MLP by attending to how niche innovations are produced in the first place. For smart grid transitions specifically, | ||
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| + | ===== Key terms ===== | ||
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| + | ; Socio-technical system | ||
| + | : A configuration of actors, technologies, | ||
| + | ; Regime | ||
| + | : The dominant rules, norms, and practices stabilising an established socio-technical system; resistant to radical change. | ||
| + | ; Niche | ||
| + | : A protected space in which radical innovations develop outside the full competitive and regulatory pressures of the regime. | ||
| + | ; Cyber-physical system (CPS) | ||
| + | : A system integrating physical processes with computation, | ||
| + | ; Technological innovation system (TIS) | ||
| + | : The actors, institutions, | ||
| + | ; Lock-in | ||
| + | : Self-reinforcing interdependencies between technologies, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== | ||
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| + | The socio-technical and CPS framings address the same infrastructure from different starting points: the former asks how social and technical elements co-evolved and what this means for change; the latter asks how physical and digital elements must be designed to function reliably together. Smart grid transitions require both: engineering architecture must be designed for interoperability and security, while institutional and market architecture must also evolve to accommodate new actors and coordination demands. | ||
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| + | The TIS and innovation ecosystem concepts address overlapping territory. An ecosystem is in one sense a particular TIS configuration at a given moment in a given geography. The distinction carries analytical weight because ecosystem framing emphasises orchestration logic — who sets the terms of collaboration — while TIS framing emphasises functional performance — what activities the system is or is not carrying out. | ||
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| + | ===== Related topics ===== | ||
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| + | [[topics: | ||
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| + | ===== References ===== | ||