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  Switching from High-carbon to Sustainable Electricity: Consumer, Entrepreneur and Industry Imperatives and Interactions


   School of Management

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  Prof Edmund Thompson, Prof Furong Li  Applications accepted all year round  Self-Funded PhD Students Only

About the Project

Overview of the research: Switching from today’s flexible but high-carbon electricity to sustainable but less flexible generation needs both supply-side technological advance and demand-side transformation ensuring electricity consumption patterns shift to more closely synchronize with sustainable production patterns. How and through what mechanisms can consumers, entrepreneurs and industry change to achieve this? How do each of these interact with technology and politics to help or hinder successful adoption of swifter sustainable electricity production? If you find these questions intriguing and would like to help develop and answer them as part of a structured programme of doctoral training and original scholarship, please get in touch with me direct.

The project: Sustainable electricity production, being dependent on solar and wind generation, is intrinsically intermittent and decentralized. Electricity supplied from fossil fuels is continuously flexible and centralized. Unsurprisingly, high-carbon electricity supply has shaped todays patterns of electricity demand, patterns that are incompatible with sustainable but more intermittent electricity supply. Switching from today’s flexible high-carbon electricity to less flexible sustainable generation needs not just supply-side technological advance but demand-side transformation ensuring electricity consumption patterns shift to more closely synchronize with sustainable electricity production patterns.

An iterative process of converging, on one hand, sustainable electricity technology developments and, on the other, electricity consumption habits across both domestic and non-domestic users is needed to ensure that electricity demand more closely fits sustainable electricity supply. But how can householders, businesses and other consumers make changes in their current electricity use patterns? What psychological, business and public policy changes are required? How can these be operationalized and through what mechanisms? How can these questions be made analytically tractable? How should they be hypothesised and empirically tested to shed light on how real-world electricity demand can be revolutionized to match more closely with intrinsically intermittent sustainable electricity supplies?

If you would like to develop a PhD project to shed light on any aspect of the transformation of, and interrelationships between, sustainable electricity demand and supply, then do please get in touch. If your interest is strong and you have an appropriate blend of qualifications, aptitudes and motivations, you will join a supervisory team lead by Professor Edmund Thompson and Professor Furong Li to develop a specific avenue of research relating to a facet of sustainable electricity demand and supply interrelationships that both interests you and that the team finds both compelling and worthwhile. Your PhD training, supervision and research will be directed to ensure that an original contribution to knowledge is made through the production of professional scholarly papers.

Preferred start date: October 2023

Application criteria: You should have at least a 2:1 at undergraduate level (or its international equivalent). Your background can be in any subject, not just management.

1. A concise and candid explanation of why you want to pursue a PhD.

2. A clear statement of what career you plan to develop, and how you will do so, after completing your PhD.

3. A rationale for why you are interested in the particular topic/project area you propose researching.

4. An original, non-generic proposal of the kind of research you would like to pursue in terms of one of the projects listed below, drawing as necessary on extant literature.

5. An explicit indication of the theoretical and empirical approaches you think might be appropriate (and that you’d personally like to deploy), drawing on extant literature.

6. A statement of the kinds of scholarly training, practical research and ethical issues you think you’d need to consider in order to succeed in completing your PhD effectively.

7. A full CV.

How to applyhttps://www.bath.ac.uk/guides/how-to-apply-for-doctoral-study/


Business & Management (5) Engineering (12)

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 About the Project