Professor Benjamin Sovacool, Director of the Sussex Energy Group at the University of Sussex in the UK, believes that the next great energy revolution could take place in a fraction of the time of major changes in the past.
But it would take a collaborative, interdisciplinary, multi-scalar effort to get there, he said. And that effort must learn from the trials and tribulations from previous energy systems and technology transitions.
Sovacool analysed energy transitions throughout history and argued that only looking towards the past can often paint an overly bleak and unnecessary picture.
But this time the future could be different, he said - the scarcity of resources, the threat of climate change and vastly improved technological learning and innovation could greatly accelerate a global shift to a cleaner energy future.
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The study highlights numerous examples of speedier transitions that are often overlooked by analysts.
For example, Ontario completed a shift away from coal between 2003 and 2014; a major household energy programme in Indonesia took just three years to move two-thirds of the population from kerosene stoves to LPG stoves; and France's nuclear power programme saw supply rocket from four per cent of the electricity supply market in 1970 to 40 per cent in 1982, researchers said.
"The mainstream view of energy transitions as long, protracted affairs, often taking decades or centuries to occur, is not always supported by the evidence," said Sovacool.
"Moving to a new, cleaner energy system would require significant shifts in technology, political regulations, tariffs and pricing regimes, and the behaviour of users and adopters," said Sovacool.
"Left to evolve by itself - as it has largely been in the past - this can indeed take many decades. A lot of stars have to align all at once," he said.
Although the study suggests that the historical record can be instructive in shaping our understanding of macro and micro energy transitions, it need not be predictive.
The study was published in the journal Energy Research and Social Science.