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GEOG3971: GEOGRAPHIES OF ENERGY TRANSITION

Please ensure you check the module availability box for each module outline, as not all modules will run in each academic year. Each module description relates to the year indicated in the module availability box, and this may change from year to year, due to, for example: changing staff expertise, disciplinary developments, the requirements of external bodies and partners, and student feedback. Current modules are subject to change in light of the ongoing disruption caused by Covid-19.

Type Tied
Level 3
Credits 20
Availability Available in 2023/24
Module Cap 28
Location Durham
Department Geography

Prerequisites

  • GEOG2472 Social Research in Geography

Corequisites

  • None

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • GEOG3501 Berlin: Culture, Politics and Contestation; GEOG3581 Territory and Geopolitics; GEOG3491 Alpine Landscapes and Processes; GEOG3691 Iceland: Field Research in Glacial Environments; GEOG3521 The Arctic; GEOG3731 Dynamic Mountain Environments; GEOG3701 Mountain Hazards; GEOG3551 Chicago: Sites of Global Change

Aims

  • To critically explore the geographies of energy transition through a combination of lectures and workshops in Durham and a week of field research in a Euorpean region.
  • To introduce students to different ways in which energy transition seeks to redefine societies relationships to energy, and how the issues and challenges of energy transition vary geographically
  • To develop and apply geographical and socio-technical perspectives to understand the multiple dimensions of energy transition across space and time, including issues of resource extraction and conflict, the development and replacement of energy infrastructures and access to energy services and their consumption.
  • To develop students energy literacy (i.e. familiarity with terms, concepts, actors and issues) and encourage critical engagement with contemporary energy issues
  • To examine through field-based research the multi-scalar and geographically uneven character of energy transitions in a region of Europe (the Oresund Denmark/Sweden) or Rhine Estuary, Netherlands.

Content

  • This module is structured around the theme of energy transition. Transition implying some form of change over time in the ways in which energy is captured, transformed, accessed, distributed and/or governed provides a framework for examining the range of challenges associated with contemporary energy use, the actors driving change and the structures and institutions that may resist it, and the potentially competing objectives of energy affordability, energy security and responses to climate change.
  • The module focuses on the geographical dimensions of energy transitions across space and time, exploring how the histories of energy production and consumption shape its present and possible futures as well as how energy transitions in one region (Europe) are tied into transitions in the extraction, production, consumption and wasting of energy materials and systems elsewhere. It will explore how new drivers for a green transition in energy systems in Europe are changing how people live and work with energy, re-working socio-spatial and political ecological relations within cities and regions and generating new patterns of uneven development and scalar configurations at national and international levels.
  • Lectures and workshops introduce students to conceptual and case material, providing an empirical and theoretical toolkit for students to critically analyse energy transitions. Field research in Northern Europe will allow students to examine the multiple dimensions and geographies of energy transition in a diverse setting where histories and future promises of energy transition collide, and to understand first-hand the connections among transitions at different scales (national, urban, community/household).
  • The module draws on the research and teaching interests of human geography staff around energy, climate, finance and urban infrastructure and explores their intersection in the context of Europe as well as their connection to other regions globally. The module seeks to capitalise on these intersections and potential synergies through team-teaching in Durham (lectures may involve contributions by more than one member of staff) and co-investigation and shared learning among staff and students while in the field.
  • Lectures may cover the following exemplary themes:
  • 1. Energy landscapes through time: materialities, spaces, flows
  • 2. Political economies of Europes energy transitions
  • 3. Undoing high carbon energy cultural economies
  • 4. Configuring low carbon energy transitions
  • 5. Energy justice across sites and scales
  • Module workshops will introduce the theme and regional case, assemble research groups and brainstorm research ideas and help students develop research proposals.
  • The field course will consist of a week in the Rhine Estuary (centred on Rotterdam) or the Oresund region (centred on Copenhagen, Denmark and Malm, Sweden).

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • On successful completion of the module students will be able to:
  • Critically evaluate the concept of energy transition from geographical perspectives
  • Demonstrate an informed understanding, supplemented by the students own research, of the connections and potential tensions between energy affordability, security & climate change
  • Demonstrate an understanding of how energy transitions vary over time and space and the differential challenges of undoing high carbon economies and configuring low carbon transitions
  • Understand how energy underpins the geographies of daily life at a range of scales and develop the capacity to reflect on their meaning for our own contexts and decisions
  • Show an appreciation for the dynamic and uneven spatiality of energy transitions, and how these manifest in a European context

Subject-specific Skills:

  • Evaluation and critical application of geographical concepts and theories to understand contemporary issues related to energy transitions and their place in the global economy
  • Planning, executing and reporting geographical research
  • Collecting, interpreting & synthesising different types of quantitative & qualitative geographical data

Key Skills:

  • Problem formulation, research design and data generation
  • Critical analysis and interpretation of data and text
  • Ability to learn in familiar and unfamiliar settings
  • Capacity to evaluate academic performance of self and others
  • Effective written and verbal communication
  • Identification, retrieval, assessment and synthesis of information from a wide range of sources
  • Team working, involving recognition and respect for the viewpoints of others
  • Time management and effective organisational skills.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • Lectures will introduce students to concepts, approaches and cases in pursuit of the modules aims and objectives. Student-learning will be assisted by reading lists, links to external sources, and summary PowerPoint slides.
  • Workshops will facilitate the modules aims and provide an important intermediary step between lectures (students as recipients of information) and field research (students as co-producers of knowledge). Workshops provide an opportunity to discuss and develop ideas covered in the lectures and to apply these in the design of a research problem.
  • A preparatory activity (for instance, a field trip to a former coal mining site in County Durham) will take place as part of one of the workshops/lectures to link energy transition in the case-study region to similar issues in Durham, helping students to identify global spaces and flows of energy transition as well as building understandings of (post)colonial contexts for contemporary energy politics and practices.
  • Field research in Europe will further student understanding of conceptual approaches to energy transition and explore how they can be applied to understand energy capture, transformation, distribution, access and governance at different scales and in different contexts. It will also provide experience in project design, research and analysis, while developing student individual and group working skills.
  • By way of formative assessment, the project outline, tutorial/check-in sessions and the oral presentation in the field will assess skills of research design and implementation along with the ability to communicate a research problem and focus and to respond to questions. Feedback on formative assessment will thus assist students to apply the concepts learned in lectures to real world problems, to frame appropriate research questions and to select suitable research methods prior to implementation in the field.
  • For summative assessment, students will prepare a literature review, develop and deliver a group presentation, and write an individual report on their group project for summative assessment. The literature review and individual reports on the group projects will test students ability to interpret and apply theoretical concepts to empirical examples and their ability to explain things clearly and support their argument with appropriate reference to the literature. The individual report will also assess skills of data analysis and provide students with an opportunity to summarise and communicate their research findings. The summative group presentation will assess students ability to communicate emergent research findings, discuss analysis and respond to questions.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Lectures6Approximately one every two weeks2 hours12 
Project planning workshops2One in Term 1 and one in Term 22 hours4 
Project planning workshops1Proposal Preparation workshop in Term 2. This session will include the field Health & Safety briefing2 hours2Yes
Durham preparatory activity1One session in Term 14 hours4Yes
Fieldwork17 days in the field, at the end of Epiphany and before Easter8 hours per day56Yes
Preparation and Reading122 
Total200 

Summative Assessment

Component: Literature reviewComponent Weighting: 25%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Literature reviewmax 4 pages A4100 
Component: Group presentationComponent Weighting: 25%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Group presentation20 minutes per group100 
Component: Individual reportComponent Weighting: 50%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Individual reportMax 6 x sides A4100 

Formative Assessment

Formative assessment will be provided in the following ways: (1) an initial project outline/proposal prepared prior to departure; (2) during the field course via tutorial sessions and scheduled check-in opportunities; (3) following the oral group presentation in the field.

More information

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