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In der vorliegenden Arbeit sind die verfügbaren Potenziale an Biomethan auf Basis nachwachsender Rohstoffe in Deutschland mit den ökologischen und ökonomischen Kenndaten (THG-Emissionsfaktoren und Gas-Gestehungskosten) sowohl statisch für das Bezugsjahr 2010 als auch im mittel- bis langfristigen Ausblick untersucht worden (Teilmodell I). Zudem ist ein Abgleich der verschiedenen Einsatzbereiche von Biomethan erfolgt, um vor dem Hintergrund des sich ebenfalls dynamisch entwickelnden Energiesystems zu ermitteln, durch welchen der Nutzungspfade (KWK, Strom, Wärme, Kraftstoff, Ersatz von Erdgas) sich der höchstmögliche Beitrag zum Klimaschutz durch die maximale Einsparung von Treibhausgasen (THG) erzielen lässt (Teilmodell II). Teilmodell 1: Die Produktion von Biogas und Biomethan sollte generell immer nach dem jeweils besten Stand der Technik betrieben werden, um THG-Emissionen etwa durch offene Gärrestlager, zu hohe diffuse Methanemissionen aus dem Fermenter oder Methanverluste bei der Aufbereitung zu vermeiden. Der Anbau der Substrate sollte zudem in regional angepassten Fruchtfolgen erfolgen. Nach dem Stand der Technik (Bezugsjahr 2010) kann Biomethan auf Basis nachwachsender Rohstoffe in großmaßstäblichen, industriell geführten Anlagen mit einem THG-Emissionsfaktor von durchschnittlich rund 84 g CO2Äq/kWh Methan erzeugt werden, wenn Substrate aus regional angepassten Fruchtfolgen verwendet werden. Dieser Wert liegt um rund 20 % höher, als es bei Einsatz von ausschließlich Mais als gängigstem Substrat mit den geringsten THG-Emissionen der Fall wäre. Im Gegensatz zu einer "Monokultur Mais" ist die Erzeugung von Biogassubstraten in regional angepassten Fruchtfolgen aber nicht mit zusätzlichen negativen Folgen im Vergleich zur konventionellen Landwirtschaft verbunden. Die Erzeugung der Substrate ist der Teil der technischen Prozesskette Biomethan, der die meisten THG-Emissionen verursacht. Auf Basis einer eine Technologie-Lernkurve mit dem Lernfaktor FLCA wird abgeschätzt, dass sich der THG-Emissionsfaktor von Biomethan im Ausblick bis 2050 auf rund 40 % des Wertes von 2010 (2030: ca. 56 %) bzw. bis auf 34 g CO2Äq/kWh Methan (2030: 47 g CO2Äq/kWh Methan) reduziert. Ausgehend von einer Einspeisekapazität von 0,25 Mrd.m3 Methan/a in 2010 können in 2050 über 20 Mrd.m3 Methan/a eingespeist werden. Die Mengenziele der Gasnetz-Zugangsverordnung werden mit 2,2 Mrd.m3 Methan/a in 2020 und 6,2 Mrd.m3 Methan/a in 2030 allerdings zunächst verfehlt. Die erheblichen Steigerungen im Ausblick sind dabei unter anderem auf die angenommenen Ertragssteigerungen sowohl der konventionellen Landwirtschaft zur Nahrungs- und Futtermittelproduktion als auch für Energiepflanzen zurückzuführen. Teilmodell 2: Bei der Erzeugung von Biomethan werden zunächst Treibhausgase freigesetzt. Durch den Ersatz von anderen, fossilen Energieträgern kann der Einsatz von Biomethan aber zum Klimaschutz durch THG-Vermeidung beitragen. Dies gilt in unterschiedlichem Maße, abhängig von den ersetzten Referenz-Technologien. Je höher die Emissionen, die durch das Referenzsystem verursacht werden, desto höher ist das Vermeidungspotenzial durch eine emissionsärmere Technik. Die Wahl des Bezugssystems beeinflussen insbesondere im Ausblick das Ergebnis und damit die Einsatzpriorität. Durch geschickte Wahl des Referenzsystems ist es möglich, das Ergebnis der Einsatzpriorität für Biomethan mindestens in seiner Eindeutigkeit zu beeinflussen. In der wissenschaftlichen Debatte ist daher besonderer Wert auf Transparenz der Annahmen zu legen. Das gilt insbesondere für das Zusammenspiel der Strom- und Wärme-Referenz. Der gezielte Einsatz von Biomethan in verschiedenen Sektoren unterscheidet sich deutlich positiv von dem reinen Ersatz von Erdgas als Energieträger. Das schlägt sich auch in den absoluten THG-Minderungen der Mengengerüste bis 2050 nieder: wird das zusätzliche Biomethan in KWK verstromt, können insgesamt rund 733 Mio. t CO2äq an Treibhausgasen über den Betrachtungszeitraum bis 2050 gespart werden, bei reinem Erdgasersatz sind es mit rund 600 Mio. t CO2äq etwa 20 % weniger. Mittelfristig (bis etwa 2030) hat bei konsistentem Ansatz der Einsatz von Biomethan in der KWK die höchste Priorität, da hier die höchsten THG-Minderungen erreicht werden können; an zweiter Stelle steht der Einsatz als Kraftstoff. Sowohl die reine Verstromung ohne Wärmenutzung als auch die reine Wärmenutzung erzielen THG-Vermeidungen in sehr ähnlicher Größenordnung wie der Ersatz des Energieträgers Erdgas durch Biomethan. Langfristig (ab 2030 bis 2050) ist die Einsatzpriorität von KWK und Kraftstoffnutzung vertauscht. Die ungekoppelte Wärmebereitstellung bleibt vor dem Ersatz von Erdgas als Energieträger; die ungekopplte Stromerzeugung ist die schlechteste Option zur THG-Minderung.
In 2009, the German government launched its "National Development Plan for Electric Mobility" which set the concrete target of having 1 million electric vehicles on the road by 2020. However, there have been hypes around e-mobility before and even if this goal were to be reached, a merely quantitative aim of a certain number of electric vehicles will not suffice to contribute to a more sustainable development in transport. This requires a more comprehensive vision of sustainable e-mobility as a system innovation. Thus, the question addressed in this thesis is: How can we assess - at this critical early stage - whether there is potential for e-mobility developing as a sustainable system innovation? A theoretical framework will be developed for assessing the potential of a wider transition at an early stage by analyzing current patterns of socio-technical co-evolution and embedding these in a wider framework of the structural dynamics involved in transitions. The aim of the analysis is to identify whether 'system-innovative' projects do emerge in the case of Germany/Baden-Württemberg and what patterns (e.g. in terms of specific actor constellations, institutional adjustments etc.) can explain this. It will be shown that the system-innovative potential of this e-mobility niche remains limited, due to the powerful influence of incumbents, conflicting political goals and traditional science approaches. A few more system-innovative activities emerge where powerful actors from outside are involved, who are capable of viewing mobility in a more systemic way (e.g. actors from the public transport or housing sector). It is argued that the role of large demonstration projects is important, but they need to be designed as transdisciplinary research projects from the beginning.
The earth as we know it can only continue to exist if humanity finds a way to switch to a sustainable use of energy and resources. This work contributes to the research carried out to achieve this goal by improving the coating of adsorptive materials. These are used in heat transformation and drying processes that allow for efficient temperature and humidity control in buildings. A central component of these adsorptive coatings is the binder that acts as "glue" in the manufacturing of the coating. In this work the methods to evaluate binder performance regarding their thermal stability under the process conditions, their mechanical stability and their influence on the adsorptive properties of the coating were established. The coatings have to meet special requirements due to the thermal stresses and low pressure atmosphere they experience in these applications. A selection of silicone binders was then characterized with the established tests according to these requirements. Additionally a selection of inorganic binders was investigated because they allow for the use of high desorption temperatures and thus a high energy efficiency of the process. Out of these binders Silres® MP50E emerged as the most promising one due to very good adsorptive properties of the coating, its good temperature stability and ease of use. While some of the inorganic binders showed very good adsorptive properties and temperature stability the mechanical stability of all inorganic binders was not sufficient for their use in adsorption heat transformation technology. This is the first time that a broad selection of binders was evaluated with regards to adsorptive coatings and the results published in literature. With a suitable binder identified, the next step was to optimize the coating of the heat exchangers in order to work out how to manufacture the most efficient and powerful heat exchangers. Samples with different coating thicknesses were manufactured in small scale and full scale and their adsorption behavior was characterized. It could be shown for the first time that it is possible to increase energy efficiency by improving the mass ration of adsorber to coating and increase the delivered power at the same time. This was shown for small and full scale samples. It was shown that under the corresponding conditions the heat transfer from the coating layer to the adsorber metal substrate is the limiting step in the process. These results can now be used for the planning and construction of adsorbers. With knowledge of a suitable binder and how to coat efficient, powerful adsorbers, the coating process itself was improved to allow for industrial scale manufacturing. A central point here is the ability to control slurry rheology. Out of many rheology additives those that are suited for the application in adsorption heat transformation were identified and their influence on the slurry rheology thoroughly characterized. Additionally the process of slurry preparation could be simplified for several different adsorbents. Here it was shown that the supersonic deagglomeration step is not necessary to prepare a slurry. Extending the possible coating techniques and in addition to the dip coating process used so far, the spray coating of adsorptive coatings was established for the first time in literature. This process is widely used in the industry and allows for easier plugin into existing coating processes. For the coating of high resolution patterns a proof of concept of the screen printing process was carried out.
Mit "InnovationCity Ruhr - Modellstadt Bottrop" soll ein typisches Stück Ruhrgebiet mit rund 70 000 Einwohnern bis zum Jahr 2020 klimagerecht umgebaut werden. Benjamin Best rekonstruiert den Partizipationsprozess des Projektes, er analysiert seine Begrenzungen und zeigt Weiterentwicklungsmöglichkeiten auf. Die empirische Studie basiert auf qualitativen Methoden der empirischen Sozialforschung, auf teilnehmenden Beobachtungen in der Modellstadt und der Teilnahme an ausgewählten Beteiligungsveranstaltungen. Mittels Interviews mit Expertinnen und Experten identifiziert der Autor kulturelle Faktoren, die die Form der Partizipation im Kontext von InnovationCity sowie den Verlauf des Gesamtprojektes bestimmt haben.
Since the middle of the 20th century, human society experiences a "Great Acceleration" manifesting in historically remarkable growth rates that create severe sustainability problems. The globally exploding potentials of information and knowledge exchange have been and are vital drivers for this acceleration. Society has now come to the point that it requires a "Great Transformation" towards sustainability to ensure the viability of the planet for a vital society. The energy transition plays a central role for this transformation. In this context, human society has developed a comparably good understanding of the necessary infrastructural changes of this transition. For transforming the patterns of energy production and use in an energy transition as part of the "Great Transformation", this process of change now needs to strengthen its focus on information, communication, and knowledge systems. Human society needs to establish a knowledge system that has the potential to create usable knowledge for sustainability solutions. This requires organizing a communication system that is sufficiently complex, interconnected, and, at the same time, efficient for integrating reflexive, open-ended, inter- and transdisciplinary learning, evaluation, and knowledge co-production processes across multiple levels. This challenge opens a wide field of research.
This cumulative dissertation contributes to research in this direction by applying a systemic sustainability perspective on the content and organization of communication in the field of research on sustainable energy and the operational level of municipal climate action as part of the energy transition. Regarding sustainability, this thesis uses strong sustainability and its principles as a frame for evaluating the content of communication. Regarding the systemic perspective, the thesis particularly relies on the following theories: (i) the human-environment system model by R. Scholz as an overarching framework regarding interactions between humans and nature, (ii) social systems theory by N. Luhmann to reflect the complexity of society, (iii) knowledge management to consider the human character of knowledge and a practice-oriented perspective, and (iv) management cybernetics, in particular, the Viable System Model by S. Beer as a framework to analyze and assess organizational structures. Furthermore, the thesis leverages the potential of text mining as a method to identify and visualize patterns in texts that reflect prevalent paradigms in communication.
The thesis applies the above conceptual and methodological basis in three case studies. Case Study 1 investigates the measures proposed in 16 municipal climate action plans of regional centers in Lower Saxony, Germany. It uses a text mining approach in the form of an Summary interpretation network analysis. It analyzes how different societal subsystems are connected at the semantic level and to what extent sustainability principles can be recognized. Case Study 2 analyzes and reflects paradigms and discursive network structures in international scientific publications on sustainable energy. The study investigates 26533 abstracts published from 1990 to 2016 using a text mining approach, in particular topic modeling via latent Dirichlet allocation. Case Study 3 turns again to the cases of municipal climate action in Lower Saxony examined in Case Study 1. It examines the involvement of climate action managers of these cities in multilevel knowledge processes. Using design principles for knowledge systems, it evaluates to what extent knowledge is managed in this field across levels for supporting the energy transition and to what extent local innovation potential is leveraged or supported.
The three case studies show that international research on sustainable energy and municipal climate action in Germany provide promising contributions to achieve a transformation towards sustainability but do not fully reflect the complexity of society and still support a growth paradigm, in contrast to a holistic sustainability paradigm. Further, the case studies show that research and local action are actively engaging with the diversity of energy technologies but are lagging in dealing with the socio-epistemic (communication) system, especially with regard to achieving cohesion. Using the example of German municipalities, Case Studies 1 and 3 highlight the challenges of achieving coherent local action for sustainability and bottom-up organizational learning due to incomplete or uncoordinated multilevel knowledge exchange. At the same time, the studies also point out opportunities for supporting the required coherent multilevel learning processes based on local knowledge. This can be achieved, for instance, by strengthening the coordinating role of intermediary organizational units or establishing closer interactions between the local operational units and the national level.
The thesis interprets and synthesizes the results of the three case studies from its systemic sustainability perspective. On this basis, it provides several generalized recommendations that should be followed for establishing viable communication systems, especially but not exclusively in policy-making:
Systemic holism: Consider matter, energy, and information flows as an integrated triplet in the context of scales, structures, and time in the various subsystems. Knowledge society: Focus on the socio-epistemic (communication) system, e.g., using the perspective of knowledge systems and associated design principles considering, for instance, working environments across horizontal and vertical levels, knowledge forms and types, and knowledge processes. Sufficiency communication: Emphasize sufficiency approaches, make it attractive, and find differentiated ways for communicating them. Multilevel cohesion and innovation: Achieve cohesion between the local and higher levels and leverage local innovations while avoiding isolated local action. Organizational interface design: Define the role of organizational units by the interactions they create at the interfaces with and between societal subsystems. Local transdisciplinarity: Support local transdisciplinary approaches integrating various subsystems, especially industry, while coordinating these approaches from a higher level for leveraging local innovation. Digital public system: Exploit existing digital technologies or infrastructures in the public system and recognize the value of data in the public sphere for achieving cohesion. Beyond the above recommendations, this thesis suggests that potential for further research lies in: Advancing nature-inspired systemic frameworks. Understanding the structure and creation of human knowledge. Developing text mining methodologies towards solution-oriented approaches.
In this thesis, the systematic, situation-oriented selection of approaches to sustainability assessment and effects of selection on assessment results are investigated. The central focus lies on the practice-oriented design of a framework to support selection decisions as well as the necessary criteria and scales for the systematic, quantifiable description of assessment approaches and assessment situations within such a framework. Sustainability assessments are important instruments for the derivation of goals, strategies and measures for shaping sustainable development in all domains. They provide decision-makers in science, industry, politics and society with vital answers to sustainability-related questions that arise in the most diverse contexts. Numerous different assessment approaches are available for carrying out sustainability assessments within such assessment situations. Because of the multitude and diversity of assessment situations and approaches, not every approach is fitting for every situation. In current practice, the fit between approaches and assessment situations is not, or only insufficiently, taken into account when selecting sustainability assessment approaches. Furthermore, no systematic studies have yet been conducted on the effects of approach selection on assessment results. The central result of this work is a concept for the situation-oriented selection support of sustainability assessment approaches based on a Multi-Criteria Decision-Making framework. With the framework, "fitness scores" are calculated, which are used to quantify and operationalize the fit between assessment approaches and assessment situations. With the developed concept, different assessment approaches are selected and exemplarily applied within a use case. Hereby, the effects of approach selection on assessment results are examined. On the basis of the knowledge gained with regard to approach selection, framework development and application, the potentials and limits of assessment approaches widely fitting for diverse assessment situations are finally derived.
Enhancing cross-functional integration in new product development becomes increasingly important for industrial players to keep up with shorter product life cycles in technological innovation dynamics. Abundant research reflects the topic's significance, yet ambiguity in empirical results persists and industrial adoption of existing methods remains incremental. This thesis employs a qualitative approach to build a case study at the design-manufacturing interface of new product development of electrified cars. Cross-functional coopetition, as the joint occurrence of cooperation and competition, is adopted to generate an in-depth understanding of integration dynamics. Socio-organizational and contextual aspects are found to shape integration in a new product development context substantially. A model of interface dynamics is developed which provides for analysis and prediction of these aspects' impact on effective integration. A grounded theory approach to enhance integration is explored that introduces constraints as stimuli to consider manufacturability aspects in the design process. Constraint introduction is found to positively impact both cross-functional integration and creativity, with eight characteristics of constraint quality identified as moderating factors. A theoretical model is contributed which outlines cause-effect relationships of constraints' impact on antecedents of new product development success. It substantiates constraints' role in innovation contexts and encourages application for design-manufacturing integration as well as for other interfaces or purposes.
Über die Notwendigkeit einer Innovationsoffensive besteht weitgehend Einigkeit in Politik und Wirtschaft. Aber über die Richtung besteht Unklarheit. Das Buch zeigt auf, daß eine zukunftsfähige Langfristdynamik für Umwelt und Beschäftigung möglich ist. Allerdings muß das heutige Produktivitätsverständnis überwunden werden, das nahezu ausschließlich den Faktor Arbeit rationalisiert und keinen geeigneten Zugang zur Produktivität des Naturhaushaltes enthält.
Das Buch leistet einen wichtigen Beitrag zur ökonomischen Neuausrichtung des technischen Fortschritts.
Anna Bliesner-Steckmann stellt sich der Frage, wie Bildung respektive Didaktik beschaffen sein muss, damit ein moralisch-nachhaltiges Handeln nicht in eine normative Pädagogik mündet. Die Autorin stellt dazu den selbstaufgeklärten, mündigen Lernenden in den Fokus ihrer Arbeit und weist nach, dass es neben einer lerntheoretischen auch einer handlungstheoretischen Grundlegung auf psychologischer Basis bedarf. Ein zentrales Ergebnis ihrer interdisziplinären Studie ist das entwickelte Prozessmodell zu moralisch-nachhaltigem Urteilen und Handeln, aus welchem sich konkrete Hinweise für die Gestaltung pädagogischer Interventionen ableiten lassen.