University of Wollongong
Browse

Repositioning urban governments? Energy efficiency and Australia's changing climate and energy governance regimes

Download (312.47 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 19:23 authored by Pauline McGuirkPauline McGuirk, Robyn Dowling, Harriet Bulkeley
Urban local governments are important players in climate governance, and their roles are evolving. This review traces the changing nexus of Australia's climate policy, energy policy and energy efficiency imperatives and its repositioning of urban local governments. We characterise the ways urban local governments' capacities and capabilities are being mobilised in light of a changing multi-level political opportunity structure around energy efficiency. The shifts we observe not only extend local governments' role in implementing climate change responses but also engage them as partners in conceiving and operationalising new measures, suggesting new ground is being opened in the urban politics of climate governance. A review of the Australian context provides important insights for the new politics of energy in the city as, internationally, energy efficiency is reframed as a climate change issue and the city is repositioned as an important strategic space in energy politics and the governance of energy systems.

History

Citation

McGuirk, P., Dowling, R. & Bulkeley, H. (2014). Repositioning urban governments? Energy efficiency and Australia's changing climate and energy governance regimes. Urban Studies: an international journal for research in urban studies, 51 (13), 2717-2734.

Journal title

URBAN STUDIES

Volume

51

Issue

13

Pagination

2717-2734

Language

English

RIS ID

107517

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC