open access publication

Article, 2024

From mitigation to adaptation: Problematizing climate change in the maritime transport industry

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Climate Change, ISSN 1757-7780, 1757-7799, 10.1002/wcc.894

Contributors

Stockbruegger, Jan 0000-0002-1563-5434 (Corresponding author) [1] Bueger, Christian 0000-0002-4259-9299 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Abstract The literature on climate change in the maritime transport industry has grown rapidly in the last few years. Yet as the research agenda has progressed, scientific debates have become more isolated and fragmented, making it difficult to translate new findings into broader policy debates. This article draws on problematization methodology to help organize the scientific debate on maritime emissions and to identify analytical gaps and challenges. We argue that scholars investigate shipping's emission problem from four distinct analytical perspectives— (1) international laws and regulations, (2) markets and economics, (3) engineering and technology, and (4) authority and legitimacy. Each of these perspectives problematizes maritime emissions in specific ways, leading to different policies and strategies to address the problem. We call for better integrating these four literatures and highlight three crosscutting areas and problems for future research. First, developing institutions that facilitate market and engineering solutions; second, integrating climate mitigation and adaptation research; and third, focusing on justice concerns to ensure an equitable green transition in the maritime industry. This article is categorized under: Climate, History, Society, Culture > Thought Leaders Policy and Governance > International Policy Framework Policy and Governance > Private Governance of Climate Change

Keywords

adaptation, adaptation research, agenda, analytical gap, area, article, authors, challenges, changes, climate, climate change, climate mitigation, concerns, crosscutting areas, culture, debates, economics, emission, emission problems, engineering, engineering solutions, findings, framework, gap, government, green transition, history, industry, institutions, international law, international policy frameworks, justice, justice concerns, law, leaders, legitimacy, literature, maritime emissions, maritime industry, maritime transport industry, market, methodology, mitigation, policy, policy debates, policy framework, private governance, problem, problematics, problematization methodology, regulation, research, research agenda, scholars, scientific debate, society, solution, strategies, technology, thought leaders, transition, transportation industry, years

Funders

  • The Velux Foundations

Data Provider: Digital Science