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Showing posts from May, 2018

Regulatory defection in electricity markets

Graphic by Sarah Harman. Taken from energy.gov . Electricity systems are undergoing rapid transformation. An increasing share of previously passive consumers is defecting energy demand and supply from the public electricity network (grid) as active ‘prosumers’ while technological and business model innovation is enabling demand-side resources to provide reliable and cost competitive alternatives to supply capacity. Yet, centralised supply-focused market structures dominated by legacy infrastructures, technologies and supply chains associated with path-dependencies and technological lock-ins continue to dominate. Regulation has been designed around these existing supply-focused markets and structures rather than networks of the future capable of integrating and facilitating smart, flexible systems. Current systems and their regulatory frameworks are struggling to engage and integrate a range of technological, economic and social innovations promising consumer-oriented solutions

Privacy paradoxes, digital divides and secure societies

More and more, we are living our lives in the online space. The development of wearable technology, automated vehicles, and the Internet of Things means that our societies are becoming increasingly digitized. Technological advances are helping monitor city life, target resources efficiently, and engage with citizens more effectively in so-called smart cities. But as with all technological developments, these substantial benefits are accompanied by multiple risks and challenges.  The Wannacry attack. The TalkTalk data breach. The Cambridge Analytica scandal. Phishing emails. Online scams. The list of digital threats reported by the media is seemingly endless. To tackle these growing threats, the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) was established in the UK in 2016 with the aim of making ‘the UK the safest place to live and do business online’. But with the increasing complexity of online life, connected appliances, and incessant data collection, how do people navigate these chal

Sweet love for planet Earth: An ode to bias and fallacy

1. Apocalypse , Albert Goodwin (1903.) At the culmination of 800 paintings, Apocalypse , was the first of Goodwin’s works in which he introduced experimental techniques that marked a distinct departure from the imitations of Turner found in most of his earlier works. [picture courtesy of the Tate online collection.] ‘ Ask for what end the heav'nly bodies shine,  Earth for whose use? Pride answers, "Tis for mine:  For me kind Nature wakes her genial pow'r,  Suckles each herb, and spreads out ev'ry flow'r;  Annual for me, the grape, the rose renew  The juice nectareous, and the balmy dew;  For me, the mine a thousand treasures brings;  For me, health gushes from a thousand springs;  Seas roll to waft me, suns to light me rise;  My foot-stool earth, my canopy the skies." ’ 2. A section of the fifth (V) verse in the first epistle of Alexander Pope’s unfinished Essay on Man , (1733-34 .) Alexander Pope , 18th Century moral poet, pion

Under her eye: Communicating climate change more effectively

My name is Adriana Suárez and I’m a 3rd year PhD Student at the School of Geographical Sciences. I am working on community based water management in rural areas in Chile, where I am from. I came back from fieldwork two months ago and in a way, I am still getting used to being back in Bristol as it is easy to feel a bit lost when you are swimming in a sea of data.  It was an intense fieldwork experience as I spent five months in Chile doing interviews with different participants, collecting documents and texts, and doing participant observation. The method I am using is called Institutional Ethnography, a method of inquiry developed by feminist sociologist Dorothy Smith and which has not been used yet in natural resources management. My aim is to learn from rural communities who are involved in water management as a way to explore a form of management that is different to the usual way in which water for human consumption and sanitation is provided in urban areas. For example,