16 results on '"Urban, Frauke"'
Search Results
2. An analysis of China’s investment in the hydropower sector in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region
- Author
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Urban, Frauke, Nordensvärd, Johan, Khatri, Deepika, and Wang, Yu
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- 2013
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3. China as a new shaper of international development: the environmental implications
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Urban, Frauke, Mohan, Giles, and Cook, Sarah
- Published
- 2013
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4. Hope, Politics and Risk: The Case of Chinese Dam in Nigeria
- Author
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Siciliano Giuseppina, Mohan Giles, Olorunfemi Felix, Urban Frauke, and Tan-Mullins May
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050204 development studies ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Public administration ,050701 cultural studies ,Corporation ,Transparency (behavior) ,Politics ,State (polity) ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,Accountability ,Agency (sociology) ,China ,Legitimacy ,media_common - Abstract
The rise of Chinese infrastructure investment in Africa has raised a set of questions about whose development agendas are being fulfilled by such projects, where the power lies in these negotiations, and how local communities are impacted by the projects. Current assumptions see China as holding the power in these relations and that its state-backed transnational corporations unilaterally get their way. This paper challenges these simplistic assumptions by examining the case of a ‘failed’ Chinese project - the Zamfara Dam in Northern Nigeria – and in doing so makes a case for the role of African political agency in brokering Chinese engagement. The dam project was initiated in 2008 between the Zamfara State government and the China Geo-Engineering Corporation; funding was supposed to come from the Chinese ExIm Bank. After the initial assessment and community consultations that spanned three years, the project failed to take off. Primary data is used to understand the process of failure and shows that the dam was initiated based on political expediency rather than the actual drive for development. It was brokered between the elites of China, Nigeria and Zamfara state and so failed to gain wider legitimacy and accountability. Also, in the drive to see the project initiated statutory shortcuts were taken. Critically, consultation was not broadbased even among the state government officials and the communities. The initiation of the project did not follow the laid down procedure of the Federal Ministry of Water Resources. Given that largely political factors played a significant role in the failure of the project, it is suggested that motivation for and implementation of development projects of this nature should transcend political whims and caprices of politicians and ensuring more transparency and broad consultation.
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- 2017
5. The livelihood challenges of resettled communities of the Bui dam project in Ghana and the role of Chinese dam‐builders.
- Author
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Yankson, Paul W. K., Asiedu, Alex B., Owusu, Kwadwo, Urban, Frauke, and Siciliano, Giuseppina
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DAMS ,FORCED migration ,CHINESE investments ,GHANAIAN politics & government - Abstract
Abstract: Emerging issues from the Bui hydropower project suggest that the experiences of two earlier hydropower projects in Ghana failed to prevent challenges related to resource access and livelihoods. This article examines the nature of the challenges, their causes, why they were not avoided and the role of the Chinese builders. We conducted 43 interviews and 11 focus group discussions and analyzed qualitative data by themes using narrative analysis. Our findings show that the livelihoods of the resettled communities are, on balance, negatively impacted by the construction of the dam. While Chinese dam‐builders played a major role in financing and enabling the dam's construction, the Ghanaian governance arrangements were found to be more important in addressing the livelihood challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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6. Evaluating the Behaviour of Chinese Stakeholders Engaged in Large Hydropower Projects in Asia and Africa.
- Author
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Tan-Mullins, May, Urban, Frauke, and Mang, Grace
- Subjects
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DAMS , *STAKEHOLDERS , *WATER power , *CLIMATE change mitigation - Abstract
Hydropower dams are back in the spotlight owing to a shifting preference for low carbon energy generation and their possible contribution to mitigating climate change. At the forefront of the renaissance of large hydropower dams are Chinese companies, as the builders of the world's largest dams at home and abroad, opening up opportunities for low- and middle-income countries. However, large hydropower dams, despite their possible developmental and carbon reduction contributions, are accompanied by huge economic costs, profound negative environmental changes and social impacts. Using fieldwork data from four hydropower projects in Ghana, Nigeria, Cambodia and Malaysia, this paper evaluates the behaviour of Chinese stakeholders engaged in large hydropower projects in Asia and Africa. We do this by first exploring the interests of the different Chinese stakeholders and then by investigating the wider implications of these Chinese dams on the local, national and international contexts. The paper concludes that hydropower dams will continue to play a prominent role in future efforts to increase energy security and reduce energy poverty worldwide, therefore the planning, building and mitigation strategies need to be implemented in a more sustainable way that takes into account national development priorities, the needs of local people and the impacts on natural habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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7. Solar PV and solar water heaters in China: Different pathways to low carbon energy.
- Author
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Urban, Frauke, Geall, Sam, and Wang, Yu
- Subjects
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SOLAR cells , *SOLAR water heaters , *SOLAR energy , *CONSUMERS , *ENERGY economics - Abstract
This review paper examines pathways towards solar energy in China by examining two different solar energy technologies, namely solar photovoltaic (PV) and solar water heaters (SWH). The paper investigates these two case studies to understand how different pathways for low carbon innovation are promoted and challenged by China's changing financing and policy-making, and how they relate to changing practices among producers and consumers. The paper finds two distinct approaches to solar energy. Chinese solar PV is predominantly produced for the export market, relies on intellectual property-intensive technology and has received much financial and political support from the central and provincial governments. On the other side, solar water heaters are an indigenous Chinese technology that is found everywhere across China, especially in rural areas. They have developed from grass-roots levels to mass products with very little central government support. Although being largely absent from high-level discussions and policies, solar water heaters could contribute a lot to China's low carbon transitions that are driven at the local level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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8. The Political Ecology of Chinese Large Dams in Cambodia: Implications, Challenges and Lessons Learnt from the Kamchay Dam.
- Author
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Siciliano, Giuseppina, Urban, Frauke, May Tan-Mullins, Pichdara, Lonn, and Sour Kim
- Abstract
Given the opportunities offered by foreign investment in energy infrastructure mostly by Chinese firms, the Government of Cambodia is giving high priority to developing hydropower resources for reducing energy poverty and powering economic growth. Using a “Political ecology of the Asian drivers” framework, this paper assesses China’s involvement in the development of large dams’ in Cambodia and its impacts on the access of natural resources such as water and energy by dam builders, local communities and the government. This analysis is based on 61 interviews and 10 focus group discussions with affected communities, institutional actors, Chinese dam builders and financiers in relation to the first large Chinese dam built in Cambodia: the Kamchay dam. Based on the results of the analysis this paper makes recommendations on how to improve the planning, implementation and governance of future large dams in Cambodia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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9. Firm-level technology transfer and technology cooperation for wind energy between Europe, China and India: From North–South to South–North cooperation?
- Author
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Urban, Frauke, Zhou, Yuan, Nordensvard, Johan, and Narain, Ankita
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WIND power ,BUSINESS enterprises ,TECHNOLOGY transfer ,LEADERSHIP - Abstract
For several decades the leading wind energy nations were European, while China and India were mainly the recipients of technology transfer. This paper aims to explore the role technology transfer/cooperation from Europe played in shaping firm-level wind energy technologies in China and India and to discuss whether the recent technology cooperation between the Chinese, Indian, and European wind firms challenges the classical North–South technology cooperation paradigm. The research finds that firm-level technology transfer/cooperation shaped the leading wind energy technologies in China and to a lesser extent in India. The paper also finds that several trends towards South–North technology cooperation have been observed between China, India and Europe, such as South–North flows of capital, drivers for market access, and R&D leadership, while the origins of innovation (e.g. patents) seem to remain predominantly in the global North. The paper concludes that the technology cooperation between China, India, and Europe has become more multi-faceted and increasingly Southern-led. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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10. Chinese Overseas Hydropower Dams and Social Sustainability: The Bui Dam in Ghana and the Kamchay Dam in Cambodia.
- Author
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Urban, Frauke, Nordensvard, Johan, Siciliano, Giuseppina, and Li, Bingqin
- Subjects
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WATER power - Abstract
There is a shortage of empirical studies on the relationship between Chinese hydropower dams and social sustainability. Comparative research on Chinese-funded and Chinese-built hydropower projects is rare. This article aims to fill parts of this gap by discussing these issues in relation to Chinese overseas hydropower dams in Ghana ( Bui Dam) and Cambodia ( Kamchay Dam). Both projects are built by Sinohydro and financed by ExIm Bank. This article draws on in-depths interviews and focus group discussions with local communities affected by the dams, institutional actors in Ghana and Cambodia, Chinese actors, and dam builders. The article uses an environmental justice perspective as an analytical framework. The article concludes that the dam projects could improve their social sustainability framework in practice and theory; social benchmarking should be introduced and social policies need to be improved to be in line with international social standards on hydropower projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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11. Social Innovation and Chinese Overseas Hydropower Dams: The Nexus of National Social Policy and Corporate Social Responsibility.
- Author
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Nordensvard, Johan, Urban, Frauke, and Mang, Grace
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SOCIAL responsibility of business ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
ABSTRACT The nexus between hydropower dams, social policy and corporate social responsibility (CSR) is a currently understudied topic. This paper aims to fill parts of this gap by discussing these issues in relation to the world's largest builder of hydropower dams, Chinese state-owned enterprise Sinohydro. This paper draws on the analysis of firm strategy documents and CSR documents and gains additional insights from key informant interviews. The research finds that in 2011 Sinohydro developed its first comprehensive policy framework for social and environmental safeguards that was in line with international standards set by the World Bank/International Finance Corporation. These policies were however later replaced by weaker, vaguer policy. The paper suggests there is a need for Sinohydro and other dam-builders to re-engage with social innovation to mitigate some of the negative social and environmental implications of hydropower dams. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. South-South Technology Transfer of Low-Carbon Innovation: Large Chinese Hydropower Dams in Cambodia.
- Author
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Urban, Frauke, Siciliano, Giuseppina, Sour, Kim, Lonn, Pich Dara, Tan‐Mullins, May, and Mang, Grace
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WATER power ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
ABSTRACT Large dams have been controversially debated for decades due to their large-scale and often irreversible social and environmental impacts. In the pursuit of low-carbon energy and climate change mitigation, hydropower is experiencing a new renaissance. At the forefront of this renaissance are Chinese actors as the world's largest hydropower dam-builders. This paper aims to discuss the role of South-South technology transfer of low-carbon energy innovation and its opportunities and barriers by using a case study of the first large Chinese-funded and Chinese-built dam in Cambodia. Using the Kamchay Dam as an example, the paper finds that technology transfer can only be fully successful when host governments and organizations have the capacity to absorb new technologies. The paper also finds that technology transfer in the dam sector needs to go beyond hardware and focus more on the transfer of expertise, skills and knowledge to enable long-term sustainable development. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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13. China-Europe Relations in the Mitigation of Climate Change: A Conceptual Framework.
- Author
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BERGER, Axel, FISCHER, Doris, LEMA, Rasmus, SCHMITZ, Hubert, and URBAN, Frauke
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CLIMATE change mitigation ,RENEWABLE energy industry ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,EMPIRICAL research ,FINANCE - Abstract
Despite the large-scale investments of both China and the EU in climate-change mitigation and renewable-energy promotion, the prevailing view on China-EU relations is one of conflict rather than cooperation. In order to evaluate the prospects of cooperation between China and the EU in these policy fields, empirical research has to go beyond simplistic narratives. This paper suggests a conceptual apparatus that will help researchers better understand the complexities of the real world. The relevant actors operate at different levels and in the public and private sectors. The main message of the paper is that combining the multilevel governance and value-chain approaches helps clarify the multiple relationships between these actors [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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14. Climate-Change Mitigation Revisited: Low-Carbon Energy Transitions for China and India.
- Author
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Urban, Frauke
- Subjects
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POWER resources , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *ECONOMIC development , *FOSSIL fuels , *CLIMATE change , *ELECTRICITY , *TECHNOLOGY transfer - Abstract
China and India are heavily dependent on high-carbon fossil fuels. This article elaborates the implications of low-carbon energy transitions in the two countries, which can mitigate their serious contribution to climate change while allowing economic growth. Three modelling case studies are presented: for the Chinese power sector, the economy of Beijing and rural Indian households without access to electricity. They demonstrate a significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and energy use, while costs are likely to increase. Financial assistance and technology transfer will be needed to support their efforts towards a climate-friendly low-carbon economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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15. Carbon Neutral China by 2060: The Role of Clean Heating Systems.
- Author
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Su, Chang and Urban, Frauke
- Subjects
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CARBON offsetting , *HEATING , *HEATING from central stations , *SPATIAL systems , *SPACE heaters , *HEAT pumps - Abstract
Smog pollution is a severe social and environmental concern for the space-heating regions in China due to fossil-intensive space heating. To reduce polluting emissions and improve social and environmental performance, local government agencies should choose adequate cleaner space-heating technologies based on diverse local conditions. This implies that all cleaner heating solutions should be considered, including low-emissions fossil fuel district heating and low-emissions fossil fuel decentralized heating as transitional technologies, as well as biomass and electricity-driven heat pumps as long-term solutions. However, stakeholders such as policy makers, equipment manufacturers, and house owners, often lack necessary information to assess the feasibility for installing adequate heating solutions at the local level. It is therefore necessary to establish a systematic method to evaluate each heating solution in various geolocations of China. This paper reviews the current heating situation in China and proposes a spatial system analysis method as a tool for heating-solution feasibility evaluation. By applying the spatial system analysis method, a qualitative investigation on the choice of heating solution in different regions of China is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Comparing the Technology Trajectories of Solar PV and Solar Water Heaters in China: Using a Patent Lens.
- Author
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Wang, Yawei, Urban, Frauke, Zhou, Yuan, and Chen, Luyi
- Abstract
China invests more in renewable energy than any other countries, such as in solar energy. The traditional literature maintains that these government-supported industries are more innovative than grassroots industries such as solar or thermal, which leads to debate. This study uses mixed methods, combining qualitative and quantitative approaches to compare the technology trajectories of leading solar water heater (SWH) and solar photovoltaic (PV) firms in China. It concentrates on the following three aspects: trajectories of key technologies, patent citation network, and type of collaboration. Our analyses show that technology trajectories differ significantly between leading SWH firms and PV firms in China. We find that the Chinese SWH firms are core to international knowledge networks, and are following a market-driven innovation mode. In contrast, Chinese PV firms are close to the center of the network and government-driven. Research suggests that grassroots innovation, by doing, using, and interaction (DUI), can create short-term market development models relying on China's traditional industry model, but cannot create a long-term international leading innovation model; only integrated science, technology, innovation modes (STI), and DUI innovation modes tend to result in international leadership in innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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