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Powering Change: The Urban Scale of Energy, an Italian Overview

Martina Massari ()
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Martina Massari: Department of Architecture, University of Bologna, 40126 Bologna, Italy

Sustainability, 2025, vol. 17, issue 17, 1-23

Abstract: Ten years after the Paris Agreement the escalating global geopolitical turmoil and waning interest in climate change’s effects, posit cities again as critical arenas for addressing the global energy transition. Drawing on the concept of the city as a living entity, the role of energy at the urban scale is considered not only as a technical infrastructure but as a complex system embedded in the spatial, political, and social fabric. The energy transition is situated within the broader context of urban governance and spatial planning, arguing that energy should be considered a foundational urban good essential to everyday life and ensuring equitable development. The study adopts a conceptual and literature-based approach, synthesizing insights from urban studies, energy geography, and climate governance literature. Special attention is given to the Italian context, where a lack of coordination across European, national, and regional political levels hinders energy transition efforts. Key references include theoretical frameworks on urban metabolism, socio-technical systems, and planning innovation, focusing on the intersection of infrastructure, policy, and local agency. The findings highlight the need to reframe energy planning as an integral part of urban and territorial governance. While grounded in Italy, the study’s insights reveal how governance fragmentation and multi-level coordination barriers resonate with European urban energy challenges, offering transferable lessons for territories with complex political and spatial systems. This would help integrate energy concerns into urban design, reduce consumption through spatial organization, and foster civic and institutional cooperation for rapid, often unplanned local energy actions to respond more swiftly to crises than traditional planning mechanisms. As a result, embedding energy within urban policy and spatial design fosters co-evolution between energy production, behavioral change, and infrastructural transformation. Recognizing this is vital for global urban policy and planning to drive resilient, equitable transitions in a rapidly changing energy landscape.

Keywords: urban energy; energy planning; local agency; civic collaboration; Italy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O13 Q Q0 Q2 Q3 Q5 Q56 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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