Personal Information
Organization / Workplace
Dunedin New Zealand
Occupation
Lead Researcher Energy Cultures 2
Industry
Energy / Oil
Website
www.energycultures.org
About
EC2 is a 4-year research project, led by the University of Otago, that aims to develop the knowledge and tools to achieve a sustainable energy transition in New Zealand’s households, businesses and our transport system.
‘Energy Cultures’ are the ways that technologies, practices and norms lock us into certain patterns of (often unsustainable) energy use. Our research is about how to support businesses and households break out of these habitual patterns, and achieve greater productivity and improved wellbeing.
EC2 has two parts: Efficiency Transitions in Households and Businesses. It runs from 1 October 2012 to 30 September 2016.
Tags
energy cultures
energy efficiency
science
research
behaviour change
energy
new zealand
transport
households
system dynamics
electric vehicles
finland
technological change
vanuatu
energy transitions
climate justice
grassroots
low energy housing
transition
uk
intermediaries
tasmania
low income householders
residential building
occupant behaviour
turkey
iceland
lighting
kenya
malcolm mcculloch
solar nano-grid project
development
bangladesh
england
inefficiency
private rental
fuel poverty
best practices
time use data
household
conservation
trends
future
high school
cycling
christchurch
mobility transitions
self-driving
urban freight
qualitative investigation
integrative framework
systemic change
behaviour changers
energy-efficiency improvements
householders
preferences
motivating
efficient driving practices
energy cultures framework
ireland
pro-environmental behavioural change
insulation
uptake
policy pathways
sweden
low-carbon transition
denmark
renewable electricity
sustainable transport
norway
energy behaviour
smart homes
grid-line expansion
politics
renewable energy
prosumer
electricity grid
energy culture
fractal like grid
barry barton
conventional vehicles
climate change policy
dunedin
government policy
See more
Presentations
(36)Personal Information
Organization / Workplace
Dunedin New Zealand
Occupation
Lead Researcher Energy Cultures 2
Industry
Energy / Oil
Website
www.energycultures.org
About
EC2 is a 4-year research project, led by the University of Otago, that aims to develop the knowledge and tools to achieve a sustainable energy transition in New Zealand’s households, businesses and our transport system.
‘Energy Cultures’ are the ways that technologies, practices and norms lock us into certain patterns of (often unsustainable) energy use. Our research is about how to support businesses and households break out of these habitual patterns, and achieve greater productivity and improved wellbeing.
EC2 has two parts: Efficiency Transitions in Households and Businesses. It runs from 1 October 2012 to 30 September 2016.
Tags
energy cultures
energy efficiency
science
research
behaviour change
energy
new zealand
transport
households
system dynamics
electric vehicles
finland
technological change
vanuatu
energy transitions
climate justice
grassroots
low energy housing
transition
uk
intermediaries
tasmania
low income householders
residential building
occupant behaviour
turkey
iceland
lighting
kenya
malcolm mcculloch
solar nano-grid project
development
bangladesh
england
inefficiency
private rental
fuel poverty
best practices
time use data
household
conservation
trends
future
high school
cycling
christchurch
mobility transitions
self-driving
urban freight
qualitative investigation
integrative framework
systemic change
behaviour changers
energy-efficiency improvements
householders
preferences
motivating
efficient driving practices
energy cultures framework
ireland
pro-environmental behavioural change
insulation
uptake
policy pathways
sweden
low-carbon transition
denmark
renewable electricity
sustainable transport
norway
energy behaviour
smart homes
grid-line expansion
politics
renewable energy
prosumer
electricity grid
energy culture
fractal like grid
barry barton
conventional vehicles
climate change policy
dunedin
government policy
See more