Operationalising Positive Tipping Points towards Global Sustainability
Lenton, T; Benson, S; Smith, T; et al.Ewer, T; Lanel, V; Petykowski, E; Powell, TWR; Abrams, JF; Blomsma, F; Sharpe, S
Date: 16 June 2021
Working Paper
Publisher
Global Systems Institute, University of Exeter
Abstract
Non-Technical Summary:
Transforming towards global sustainability requires a dramatic acceleration of current progress.
Hence there is growing interest in finding ‘positive tipping points’ at which small interventions can
trigger self-reinforcing feedbacks that accelerate systemic change. Examples have recently been
seen in power ...
Non-Technical Summary:
Transforming towards global sustainability requires a dramatic acceleration of current progress.
Hence there is growing interest in finding ‘positive tipping points’ at which small interventions can
trigger self-reinforcing feedbacks that accelerate systemic change. Examples have recently been
seen in power generation, personal transport, and lighting. But how to identify positive tipping
points that have yet to occur? We synthesise theory and examples to provide initial guidelines for
creating enabling conditions, sensing when a system can be positively tipped, who can trigger it,
and how they can trigger it. All of us can play a part in triggering positive tipping points.
Technical Summary:
Recent work on positive tipping points towards sustainability has focused on social-technological
systems and the agency of policymakers to tip change, whilst earlier work identified socialecological positive feedbacks triggered by diverse actors. We bring these together to consider
positive tipping points across social-ecological-technological systems and the potential for
multiple actors and interventions to trigger them.
Established theory and examples provide several generic mechanisms for triggering tipping
points. From these we identify specific enabling conditions, reinforcing feedbacks, actors, and
interventions that can contribute to triggering positive tipping points in the adoption of sustainable
behaviours and technologies. Actions that can create enabling conditions for positive tipping
include targeting smaller populations, reducing price, improving performance, desirability and
accessibility, coordinating complementary technologies, providing relevant information, and
altering social network structure. Actions that can trigger positive tipping include social, ecological,
and technological innovations, policy interventions, public investment, private investment,
broadcasting public information, and behavioural nudges.
Positive tipping points can help counter widespread feelings of disempowerment in the face of
global challenges and help unlock ‘paralysis by complexity’. A key research agenda is to consider
how different agents and interventions can most effectively work together to create system-wide
positive tipping points whilst ensuring a just transformation.
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