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Was kann ein produzierender Mittelständler tun, damit die Möglichkeiten für einen effizienteren Umgang mit Energie in seinem Betrieb auch ausgeschöpft werden? Die Ergebnisse eines zweijährigen Forschungsprojektes in Baden-Württemberg: Energieeffizienz ist für die kleinen und mittleren Unternehmen (KMU) ein grundsätzlich bedeutsames Thema, größtenteils gleichbedeutend mit anderen strategischen oder operativen Fragen. Je größer die Unternehmen, umso mehr trifft das zu ; die Unterschiede nach Energiebedarf sind hingegen gering. Erfolgsversprechende Maßnahmen sind: die Unternehmen müssen Energieeffizienz strategisch verankern und ihre Führung darauf ausrichten, sollten möglichst viele verschiedene Maßnahmen umsetzen und die Belegschaft sensibilisieren. Aber auch die gesellschaftliche Meinung "treibt" die Unternehmen zu mehr Energieeffizienz.
Die Förderung der Kraft-Wärme-Kopplung (KWK) in kleinen und mittleren Unternehmen der Galvanotechnik stellt ein erklärtes Ziel des Landes Baden-Württemberg und des Forschungsprojekts GalvanoFlex_BW dar. Als komplexe Energieeffizienzmaßnahme stellt die Kraft-Wärme-Kopplung erhöhte Anforderungen an die Unternehmen und das professionelle Umfeld (Beratung, Service, Handwerk, Contracting). Hemmnisse zur Umsetzung der Technologie finden sich daher sowohl innerhalb der Unternehmen als auch außerhalb. Die Hemmnisse bei der Umsetzung der Kraft-Wärme-Kopplung in der Galvanotechnik sind auf unterschiedliche Ursachen zurückzuführen, wie hohe Komplexität der KWK-Technologie, schwierige Bewertung des Gesamtnutzens im Unternehmen, mangelnde personelle Ausstattung oder auch fehlende Unternehmerentscheidungen. Empfehlungen der Forschungspartner zu deren Überwindung können aus den Ergebnisses der sozial-wissenschaftlichen Begleitforschung gewonnen werden.
In an effort to make the cultural and institutional aspects of energy efficiency in industrial organizations more visible, this article introduces a theoretical framework of decision-making processes. Taking a sociological perspective and viewing organizations as cultural systems embedded in wider social contexts, I have developed a multilevel framework addressing institutional, organizational, and individual dimensions shaping decisions on energy efficiency. The framework's development is based on qualitative empirical fieldwork and integrates insights into organizational theory; neo-institutional theory, the attention-based view of the firm, and organizational culture theories. I conclude that decisions on energy efficiency are results of problematization and theorization processes. These processes emerge between the institutional issue-field, the organization, and its members. The model explains decisions shaped by environment (external and material), organizational processes (energy-efficiency practices, climate and culture) and individuals’ characteristics. The framework serves several purposes: introducing a meta-theory of decision making, providing a concept for empirical analysis, and enabling connectivity to the research on barriers.
Despite strong political efforts across Europe, small and medium- sized enterprises (SMEs) seem to neglect adopting effective measures for energy efficiency. Adopting a cultural perspective and based on a study among industrial SMEs in Southern Germany, we investigate what drives decisions for energy efficiency in SMEs and how energy management contributes to closing the energy efficiency gap. The study follows a mixed-methods approach and combines eleven ethnographic case studies and a quantitative survey among 500 manufacturing SMEs in Southern Germany.
The main contribution of the paper is to offer a perspective on energy efficiency in SMEs beyond the diffusion of energyefficient technology. By contrast, our results strongly suggest that the diffusion of energy efficiency in industrial companies should not be solely reduced to decisions for technical measures. We shed light on how energy efficiency is established and the importance of energy management in SMEs.
Our study shows that energy efficiency is well established in the investigated SMEs. At the same time, establishment cannot be explained by company size or energy demand. By contrast, the contextual environment of the company and the individual leadership of the company appear to have a more substantial influence. The embedding of energy efficiency in corporate strategy, a broad spectrum of different practices, the involvement of the employees, actions for raising awareness in everyday work life, and distributing attention by organizational measures constitute the driving forces in establishing energy efficiency, and these drivers can be subsumed under the label of energy management.
Urgent action is needed to keep the chance of limiting global warming to 1.5°C or even 2.0°C. Current outlooks by IPCC, and many other organisations forecast that this will be impossible at current pace of emission 'reductions' – Germany has already hit 1.5° warming this year. Across 2019, particularly during the UN New York Climate summit, numerous organisations declared their ambition to become net carbon neutral. Amongst these were investors and companies, including quite a number of German ones.
We apply a mixed methods approach, utilising data gathered from approx. 900 companies after Climate Week in context of the Energy Efficiency Index of German Industry (EEI), along with media research focusing on decarbonisation plans announced and initiatives pledging climate action.
With this, we analyse how German companies in the manufacturing sectors react to rising societal pressure and emerging policies, particularly what measures they have taken or plan to implement to reduce the footprint of their company, their products and their supply chain. In this, we particularly analyse whether and in what way energy- and resource consumption, as well as carbon emissions are considered in the development and lifecycle of goods manufactured. This is of huge relevance as these goods determine the future footprint of buildings, vehicles and industry.
Regarding the supply chain, current articles indicate that small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) are particularly challenged by increasing demands from their large corporate clients and an alleged lack of preparedness to be able to take and afford prompt decarbonisation action themselves (Buchenau et. al. 2019). Notably the automotive industry recently announced new models that will be 100% carbon neutral all the way through (ibid). We thus analyse if and how factors such as company size, energy intensity and sector affiliation influence a company’s plan to fully decarbonize. Ownership structure and corporate culture, it appears, significantly impact on the degree of decarbonisation action underway.