Start Date
Immediate
Expiry Date
28 Nov, 25
Salary
3.059
Posted On
29 Aug, 25
Experience
0 year(s) or above
Remote Job
Yes
Telecommute
Yes
Sponsor Visa
No
Skills
Interpersonal Skills, Spatial Planning, Affinity, Arguments, Teamwork, Political Ecology, Public Administration, Barriers, Qualitative Research, Community Engagement, English, Dutch
Industry
Education Management
The Faculty of Spatial Sciences together with the Faculty of Science and Engineering offer a 4-year M20 (Ubbo Emmius) Program funded PhD position for a project titled “Grassroots retrofitting: Towards community empowerment and fair residential energy transition using community-based infrared thermography”.
Residential buildings are major contributors to energy consumption and environmental impacts. In the Netherlands, approximately 6 million homes built before 2005 have poor thermal performance, with energy labels of E or lower. Retrofitting these homes is critical for achieving low-carbon transitions and addressing energy poverty and equity challenges. This is particularly urgent in North-East Groningen, a region with the highest rate of energy poverty in the Netherlands.
Despite efforts, current policies and programs have struggled to achieve their goals. Top-down, market-driven approaches, which rely on financial incentives and standard information dissemination, often fail to engage marginalized communities. The majority of recent Dutch climate-policy subsidies have thus far benefitted wealthier households, exacerbating social inequality and undermining public support for the energy transition. International research echoes this concern, noting that retrofit programs frequently fail to reach those most in need. To develop equitable and effective policy tools, further research is needed on the contexts, compositions, and mechanisms of retrofits, as well as a deeper understanding of the barriers preventing vulnerable communities from taking action.
This PhD project proposes “grassroots retrofitting” - a bottom-up, data-driven approach piloted in North-East Groningen, an area where energy poverty remains a challenge and retrofitting participation remains low. Using AI-powered infrared thermography, the initiative visualizes energy inefficiencies, making heat loss tangible for homeowners and potentially increasing awareness and willingness to take action. Combined with “connection workshops”, where households interpret thermal images with researchers and receive retrofit advice from professionals, the project aims to also improve the ability of households to take action. By addressing barriers to retrofitting and subsidy access, it seeks to empower households vulnerable to energy poverty and fill critical research gaps in this area.
The project is supervised by Dr. Elen-Maarja Trell (promotor, Faculty of Spatial Sciences) and Dr. Liangliang Cheng (Faculty of Science and Engineering. The candidate will join a lively and highly international team of PhD candidates working on spatial planning, human geography, community engagement and resilience, supported by laboratory, equipment and expertise of the Dynamics and Vibration research group as well as partners from public outreach and retrofitting consultancy companies active in the Province of Groningen.
A selection of expected results of the project:
1. A tested, community-driven approach combining technical/visual tools (e.g., AI-powered thermography) and social innovations (e.g., community workshops) to engage marginalized households in retrofitting actions.
2. Policy recommendations for retrofit programs specifically designed to empower marginalized communities, ensuring equitable access to subsidies and resources.
3. A database of neighborhood retrofit-engagement typologies, linking socio-economic and building data to identify the most effective outreach strategies and technical solutions.
4. A database evaluating citizen willingness and ability to take retrofit action, providing insights for scaling the approach to other marginalized regions/neighborhoods.
5. Research insights into the barriers for marginalized communities to take retrofit actions, effective ways to empower marginalized communities, evaluating the potential of visual/technological tools to raise awareness and community-workshops to increase the ability to take action.
The PhD candidate will be required to:
Organisation
The University of Groningen has an international reputation as a dynamic and innovative center of higher education offering high-quality teaching and research. Balanced study and career paths in a wide variety of disciplines encourage the 35,000 students and researchers to develop their own individual talents. Belonging to the best research universities in Europe and joining forces with prestigious partner universities and networks, we are truly an international place of knowledge.
QUALIFICATIONS
We are seeking to recruit a PhD candidate for a comprehensive interdisciplinary project to contribute to developing a community-based, digitally empowered approach to retrofit program design to empower marginalized communities. The project includes direct hands-on work with households, neighborhood associations, local government representatives, consultancy companies to discuss, inform about and implement retrofit solutions and explore barriers to action. Due to the strong emphasis on community-engagement, qualitative / participatory work with the communities and the aim to empower marginalized communities, excellent communication and interpersonal skills are essential for this project. In order to work with the communities, the candidate is required to be able to work and communicate in the local language (i.e. Dutch; the level of Dutch does not have to be at a native-speaker level but sufficient to engage with local communities and practitioners).
We are looking for a candidate who:
How To Apply:
Incase you would like to apply to this job directly from the source, please click here
Please refer the Job description for details