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Articles

Energy transition with biomass residues and waste: regional-scale potential and conflicts. A case study from North Hesse, Germany

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ABSTRACT

Bioenergy plays a significant role in the expansion of sustainable energy transitions based on renewable energies, and thus in achieving climate targets through decarbonization of global production and consumption patterns. This article deals with the question of whether and which bioenergy potentials exist and the barriers and preconditions relevant for utilization from a regional perspective based on stakeholder interviews in North Hesse, Germany. Insights were gained into the objectives that regional stakeholders associate with energy recovery from residual and waste materials and the role of ecological modernization in this context. Under current conditions, regional stakeholders assess the potential of biomass residues for energy use as low owing to legal barriers to the use of biomass residues and waste for energy, a high degree of fragmentation, and locally specific design of the uses of these resources. These regional stakeholder assessments contradict the expansion targets and potential calculations of government agencies and research centers. Furthermore, regional stakeholders do not link the expansion of residue- and waste-based bioenergy with ecological modernization objectives (i.e. linking ecological objectives with increases in innovation, growth, and employment), but are mainly driven by the search for cost-savings, improved efficiency, and more sustainable use of biomass residues.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) under grant number 03SF0550A.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, Germany [Grant Number 03SF0550A].

Notes on contributors

Stefanie Baasch

Stefanie Baasch is a senior researcher and scientific project coordinator at the Sustainability Research Center, University of Bremen. She completed her doctorate in geography at the University of Hamburg. Her research focus is on socio-ecological transformation, environmental governance, political ecology, environmental justice and participation. In the summer semester 2020, she was deputy professor for Integrative Geography at the European University Flensburg.