260 likes | 387 Views
DIMETIC, 19th october 2007, Maastricht, The Netherlands. Coevolution of supply and demand: the case of environmental innovations. Maïder Saint Jean GREThA, Bordeaux University saintjea@u-bordeaux4.fr. References .
E N D
DIMETIC, 19th october 2007, Maastricht, The Netherlands Coevolution of supply and demand: the case of environmental innovations Maïder Saint Jean GREThA, Bordeaux University saintjea@u-bordeaux4.fr
References • Belis-Bergouignan M-C., Oltra V., Saint Jean M., 2004, Trajectories towards clean technology: example of volatile organic compound emission reductions, Ecological Economics, 48, pp201-220. • Saint Jean M., 2005, Coevolution of suppliers and users through an evolutionary modelling – The case of environmental innovations, European Journal of Economic and Social Systems, 18 (2), pp255-284. • Saint Jean M., Polluting emissions standards and clean technology trajectories under competitive selection and supply chain pressure, Forthcoming in Journal of Cleaner Production.
Outline of the presentation • Some stylised facts on environmental innovations • The main building blocks of the model • Results • Further developments: analysis of policy instruments • Conclusions
1. Some “stylised facts” on environmental innovations • Environmental innovations: innovations that consist of new or modified processes, practices, systems and products which benefit the environment and contribute to environmental sustainability regulatory push-pull effect • Clean technology vs end-of-pipe technology • Clean technology implies an integrated change in the production process and a reduction of pollution at source; • End-of-pipe technology controls and treats pollution after it has been generated multi-dimensionality of clean technology; innovation offsets • Environmental R&D dedicated to the improvement of environmental quality of processes and products • “Green paradigms” for the generation of heat, electricity and motion radical questioning of existing production processes; technological irreversibility and lock-in
Case 1: the paintings • Diversity of users and market segments • Public concern • Significant range of environmental innovations with no or low solvents • Change in the knowledge base of the producers and the users: paintings organic chemicals
Case 2: the surface treatment activities • Clean technologies for the surface treatment, ex.: low temperature plasma • SMEs of the metal-work sector subcontractors of car manufacturers and aerospace firms • Technological irreversibilities in the solvent paradigm • Obstacles to the adoption of clean technology: • High adopion costs related to weak financial and absorptive capacities • Product performance constraints
2. The main building blocks of the model Scheme of supply-demand interactions SUPPLY n firms DEMAND m firms Allocation of R&D Investment Process/Product innovation Profile of each client: Requirement Levels: maximum price, minimum quality standards, environmental regulatory standards Competition among suppliers Preferences Performance achieved for each characteristic Market share Purchase Defection Average performance of industry
Procedure of supplier’s selection by a client at time t Supplier t-1 of client j: S(t-1) Requirement thresholds of client j at time t At time t, performances of supplier S Requirement thresholds reached? Defection of client j YES NO Product replacement with the same supplier S Selection of a new supplier remaining on the market on the basis of its global performance Transfer of information from client j to S(t): priority characteristics Choice of a new supplier S’ Transfer of information from client j to S’(t)
Models of reference • Chiaromonte F., Dosi G., 1993, Heterogeneity, competition and macroeconomic dynamics, Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, 4, 39-46. • Malerba F., Nelson R., Orsenigo L., Winter S., 1999, ‘ History-friendly ’ models of industry evolution: the computer industry, Industrial and Corporate Change, 8, 3-40. • Laffond G., Lesourne J. and Moreau F., 1998, Stratégies de différenciation environnementale et dynamique des structures de marché, Colloque AFSE, Toulouse, May. • Valente M., 1999, Evolutionary economics and computer simulations - A model for the evolution of markets, PhD thesis, University of Aalborg, Denmark.
Table of correspondence • R&D investments and innovation activities of suppliers • The product price • Technology space • Decision rules of clients • Inter-firm interactions • Exit process
Environmental quality of the process X3max2 PARADIGM 2 X3max1 PARADIGM 1 Productive efficiency of the process 3.Technology space
3. Results • Protocol of simulation: parameter initialisation, battery of simulations • The reference configuration: 12 suppliers, 200 clients, 2 groups of clients • Two scenarios or market configurations: • scenario ‘ homogeneous oligopoly ’ • scenario ‘ market segmentation ’
4. Further developments: policy implications • The impact of tighter standards: • Process standards • Product standards • Policy timing The rise in the environmental requirements of clients, generated by tighter environmental standards, has different impacts according to the nature and timing of the standards • The role of procurement policy: • Critical mass of ‘green’ users • Strategic niche management (Kemp, Schot and Hoogma, 1998) • Taxes, subsidies, diffusion of information, etc.
Process standards Scenario HO Scenario MS
Product standards Scenario HO Scenario MS
Limitations • Methodological problems related to simulations : • the stochastic characteristic of the dynamics; • the high number of parameters; • the empirical calibration of the model. • Limits of the model: • no sectoral differences are taken into account; • there’s no real price strategies of firms; • effective financial constraints do not apply; • the role of final consumers is not explicitly incorporated; • no new innovative entrants are considered. • Regarding environmental innovations: • the anticipation of environmental regulation by firms and its impact on firm’s innovation strategy; • the issue of “transition management” and system innovations.
5. Conclusions • An evolutionary model of supply and demand coevolution • Process/product innovations with characteristics of environmental quality • Related questions cf. M. Schwoon (fuel cell vehicles, role of infrastructures), E. Brouillat (recycling, product life extension), impact of REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Autorisation and Restriction of Chemicals) on innovation • Empirical validation?