The Role of Trials and Demonstration Projects in the Development of a Sustainable Bioeconomy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (i)
- What can companies accomplish by engaging in demonstration projects and trials?
- (ii)
- What determines the success and failure of demonstration projects and trials?
- (iii)
- How can policy makers affect the outcome of demonstration projects and trials?
2. US Demonstration Projects and Programmes in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s
3. Demonstration Projects for Energy Technologies
- Allowance for failure: demonstration projects are experiments and should include the possibility to shift back to technical verification in the case of evidence for technical prematurity;
- Cost and risk acceptance: if the private sector is willing to accept costs and risks this is an indication for near-term or medium-term commercialisation;
- Trialability: prospective adopters can sample the innovation; in the case of modular innovations this may be easier;
- Audience identification: should distinguish between technical (engineers, architects, planners etc.) and non-technical audience (residents, general public);
- Audience predisposition toward innovation: is the intended audience favourable of the innovation or do they have to change their behaviour;
- Need for inducements beyond demonstration: the future commercial success of a demonstrated innovation may depend on other public policy instruments, such as “purchase commitments, tax exemptions and credits, and other incentives for manufacturers and buyers” [10] (p. 489).
3.1. Aims of Demonstration Projects and Trials
“a government-funded programme or project that has specific technological, operational, and social objectives; with an overall budget and duration; which invites bids with a clear specification of goals; evaluates projects against these, requires a formal management structure; and provides ongoing customer/user support from the manufacturer or operator”.[13] (p. 3586)
- Prove technical feasibility;
- Reduce building, materials, components, operating and maintenance costs;
- Prove feasibility in commercial applications;
- Hybrid projects.
- 5.
- Develop public awareness and acceptance;
- 6.
- Introduce institutional embedding of the technology and related practices for societal change.
3.2. Organizational Solutions
- One-off high profile “demonstrations” and competitions to create public awareness about the potentials of a new technology at an early stage;
- Coordinated “programmatic demonstrations” to systematically measure, test, evaluate, and characterise technology for a particular application, often comparing different models and technologies;
- Programmatic “field trials” and tests to improve the performance and reduce costs, in the immediate run-up to commercial roll-out backed by subsidies and incentives, contributing to the development of installation know-how and the establishment of standards; and
- Permanent testing and demonstration facilities (“test centres”), providing a learning facility and knowledge resource, and supporting manufacturers in many ways, including product certification.
3.3. Learning Processes and Outcomes of Demonstration Projects and Trials
4. Discussion and Conclusions
4.1. What Can Companies Accomplish by Engaging in Trials and Demonstration Projects?
4.2. What Determines the Success and Failure of Trials and Demonstration Projects?
- User involvement is crucial at all stages of demonstration projects to facilitate information and learning. This is particularly challenging in a bioeconomy context as markets are often still to be formed, which makes it difficult to identify relevant users a-priori;
- Project design should not be rigid in order to allow user input and modifications to improve effectiveness and market readiness. As they are dependent on the development of a particular biorefinery technology and its associated products, processes, and services, the aims and activities of a demonstration project may need to co-evolve with changing markets, industries and institutions;
- Considering the required size of the projects, a key barrier for the deployment of biorefineries is the large investments needed to fully test the viability and feasibility of different biorefinery concepts and designs [43];
- Dissemination of results, performance monitoring, trouble shooting, and evaluation information should be included in the project design. Demonstration projects and programmes in an uncertain and immature field such as biorefineries need to be permissive of failure to improve learning, and they need to acknowledge the high-risks involved in its development and deployment;
- The programme should be clear about the maturity of the technology to be demonstrated, and subsidies for demonstration projects and trials of new generations of technology should not be used for the older generation of technology. Protection to market selection should only be provided to immature technologies: for example, support for further development of first-generation biofuels should not be provided.
4.3. How Can Policy Makers Affect the Outcome of Trials and Demonstration Projects?
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Attribute of Demonstration Project | Application Success | Information Success | Diffusion Success |
---|---|---|---|
Technology “tried and tested” | X | X | X |
Well-designed experiment focussed on precise objectives | X | X | X |
Significant initiative for demonstration from potential users | X | X | X |
Significant cost sharing by participants | X | X | X |
Significant risk sharing by participants | X | X | X |
Demonstration applicable to variety of sites | X | X | |
All key parties are involved | X | X | |
Well-defined high potential initial market | X | ||
Conclusive to decision making on economic basis, minimal impediments | X | ||
Supply and support industry in place | X |
Goals of Demonstration and Trial Projects |
---|
Prove technical feasibility |
Contribute to the formation of knowledge networks |
Facilitate learning that can be instrumental for decisions on technology choice and can form a starting point for advocacy coalitions |
Reduce building, materials, components, operating and maintenance costs |
Prove feasibility in commercial applications |
Prove environmental feasibility (e.g., through LCA analysis) |
Develop public acceptance and awareness |
Expose system weaknesses such as various institutional barriers, and |
Introduce institutional embedding for societal change |
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Fevolden, A.M.; Coenen, L.; Hansen, T.; Klitkou, A. The Role of Trials and Demonstration Projects in the Development of a Sustainable Bioeconomy. Sustainability 2017, 9, 419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9030419
Fevolden AM, Coenen L, Hansen T, Klitkou A. The Role of Trials and Demonstration Projects in the Development of a Sustainable Bioeconomy. Sustainability. 2017; 9(3):419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9030419
Chicago/Turabian StyleFevolden, Arne Martin, Lars Coenen, Teis Hansen, and Antje Klitkou. 2017. "The Role of Trials and Demonstration Projects in the Development of a Sustainable Bioeconomy" Sustainability 9, no. 3: 419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9030419
APA StyleFevolden, A. M., Coenen, L., Hansen, T., & Klitkou, A. (2017). The Role of Trials and Demonstration Projects in the Development of a Sustainable Bioeconomy. Sustainability, 9(3), 419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9030419