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X-WR-CALNAME:EIEE - European Institute on Economics and the Environment
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for EIEE - European Institute on Economics and the Environment
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TZID:Europe/Rome
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TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20220327T010000
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DTSTART:20221030T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221129
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221202
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221117T110013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221117T110013Z
UID:9619-1669680000-1669939199@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:IAMC Annual Meeting 2022
DESCRIPTION:In-Person Meeting: November 29 – December 1 at the College Park Marriott Hotel & Conference Center\, College Park\, MD\, USA\nOnline Poster Sessions: November 29 – 30\nThe Integrated Assessment Modeling Consortium (IAMC) announces the Fifteenth IAMC Annual Meeting to be held in College Park\, Maryland\, home of the University of Maryland\, in College Park\, MD\, USA. The event will be held in person\, with a portfolio of online events as part of the programme. Presentations in oral sessions (keynote sessions\, and parallel oral sessions) will be held in person\, with attendance both in person and online. \nIn-person sessions will be organised in the U.S. Eastern Time zone. IAMC will take action in order to mitigate the inconveniences that this may create for participants based in regions with different time zones\, such as making the recording of sessions immediately available for participants for a certain time. Two kinds of poster sessions are planned: fully online and fully in person. Presenters in fully in-person sessions can present their poster also at the fully online sessions if they wish so. \nIAMC hopes that this model will provide the appropriate framework for another inspiring and intellectually lively meeting. \nMore info: https://www.iamconsortium.org/event/fifteenth-iamc-annual-meeting-2022/ \n  \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/iamc-annual-meeting-2022/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221117T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221117T170000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221117T104226Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221117T104644Z
UID:9611-1668691800-1668704400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:COP27 event | High wellbeing with low energy demand towards a modern net-zero society
DESCRIPTION:High wellbeing with low energy demand towards a modern net-zero society     \nModerator: Joyashree Roy\, Asian Institute of Technology (AIT)\, Thailand \n10:30-10:35 Welcome from the moderator\n10:30-10:45 Opening remarks and the background of the Energy Demand changes Induced by Technological and Social innovations (EDITS) network\nKeigo Akimoto\, Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth (RITE)\, Japan\n10:45-11:00 Importance of demand side solutions for the transformation towards net-zero society\nBas van Ruijven\, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)\, Austria\n11:00-11:15 Innovation and digitalization: the levers of transformation\nElena Verdolini\, European Institute on Economics and the Environment (RFF-CMCC)\, Italy\n11:15-11:30 Urban space and society in 2050 in balance with planetary boundaries\nDiana Ürge-Vorsatz\, Central European University (CEU)\, IPCC WG3 Co-Vice chair\n11:30-12:00 Moderated panel discussion with speakers: the expected technological\, institutional\, behavioral and infrastructural innovations and their feasibility \n  \nPlace: Japanese Pavilion\, International Convention Center (SHICC)\, Sharm El-Sheikh\, Egypt\nOnline streaming: Zoom meeting hosted by the Japan Pavilion\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/89219721118?pwd=VUdlRWxKcDl3R00yM2MyNTJ4dmEzUT09\nID: 892 1972 1118 | password: 003703
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cop27-event-high-wellbeing-with-low-energy-demand-towards-a-modern-net-zero-society/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221116T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221116T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221014T151112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221014T151112Z
UID:9450-1668610800-1668614400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:SWEEEP Webinar series - James Sallee
DESCRIPTION:Title: Pigou Creates Losers: On the Implausibility of Achieving Pareto Improvements from Efficiency-Enhancing Policies \nSpeaker: James Sallee\, UC Berkley\n\n \nAbstract: Economic theory predicts that efficiency-enhancing policy changes can be made to benefit everyone through the use of lump-sum transfers that compensate anyone initially harmed by the change. Precise targeting of compensating transfers\, however\, may not be possible when agents are heterogeneous and the planner faces\nconstraints on the design of transfers\, due\, for example\, to asymmetric information. In this paper\, I derive an impossibility condition showing when Pareto improvements are not possible. The condition can be directly tested with readily available data. It relates the size of efficiency gains to the degree of predictability between initial burdens and variables used to condition transfers. The main empirical application is to a gasoline tax\nto correct carbon emissions\, but I present related results for other sin taxes. Results indicate that it is infeasible to create a Pareto improvement from the taxation of these goods\, and moreover that plausible policies are likely to leave a large fraction of households as net losers. The paper argues that the existence of these losers is relevant to policy design and may help explain political challenges faced by many efficient policies.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/sweeep-webinar-series-james-sallee/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221115T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221115T150000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221028T081743Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221028T081743Z
UID:9509-1668520800-1668524400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:Assessing systemic climate change risk though composite indicators 
DESCRIPTION:Speaker:\nDENITSA ANGELOVA\, CMCC@Ca’ Foscari\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and Venice Ca’ Foscari University \nDenitsa Angelova holds a PhD in Economics at the  Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg. Previously she worked as a senior researcher at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy and the Technical University of Munich and serves as a consultant for the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences on matters regarding statistics\, big data\, and supercomputing applications in economics.  She has comprehensive expertise in applied economic research\, conceptual and quantitative modeling. \nModerator:\nFRANCESCO BOSELLO\, CMCC@Ca’ Foscari\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and Venice Ca’ Foscari University \nGraduated at the Ca’ Foscari University of Venice\, he received a Master degree in economics from the University College of London (UK) and a Doctoral degree in economics from the University of Venice. He is presently associate professor of economics at the Ca’ Foscari University of Venice\, and senior scientist at the Euro-Mediterranean Centre on Climate Change (CMCC) where he coordinates the Economic Analysis of Climate Impacts and Policy division. He is deputy director of the European Institute for Economics and the Environment a joint initiative between CMCC and the US Resources for the Future. Previously he has been an associate professor at the University of Milan and an affiliate scientist at the Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei Milan. He is currently undertaking research activities in the area of climate change impact assessment and the design of optimal mitigation and adaptation strategies developing integrated assessment modelling tools and applied general equilibrium economic models.  His other research interests are more broadly related to international environmental agreements and the economics of the environment and of sustainability. \nAbstract:\n\nWe propose a country-level climate risk index that is transparent\, replicable\, grounded on quantitative information and rigorously rooted on the IPCC AR5 climate risk definition consisting in the intersection of hazard\, exposure\, and vulnerability. The climate risk index ranks 145 countries applying rigorous methods for normalization\, weighting\, and aggregation of the risk components. It was demonstrated that applying this climate risk definition\, the exposure component\, on its turn strictly correlated with population\, dominates hazard and vulnerability (sensitivity and adaptive capacity). This result is robust to sensitivity tests on key parameters. Accordingly\, countries with large populations would tend to score high in terms of climate risk\, while countries with a small population would score low.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/assessing-systemic-climate-change-risk-though-composite-indicators/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221110T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221110T144500
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221107T093040Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221117T103854Z
UID:9551-1668087000-1668091500@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:COP 27 event | IPCC Session on Delivering a Sustainable Future: Feasibility and Policy
DESCRIPTION:This session aims to look at the IPCC mitigation pathways and transitioning in the context of sustainable development. It will consider the policies\, structures and institutions to realize such transitions. \nFormat: The event has been organized as a Panel session featuring short interventions/presentations before moving to moderator and audience questions. \nChair: Fatima Denton \nChair’s assist: Shreya Some \nh. 13:30 – Explanation from the moderator of what the session will cover and the format\nFatima Denton (WG III Coordinating Lead Author\, Chapter 17) \n  \nAGENDA \nh. 13:40 – How feasible are mitigation pathways and transitions?\nMassimo Tavoni ( WG III Lead Author\, Chapter 3) – Virtual Speaker \nh. 13:50 – Transitions in the context of Sustainable Development\nMinal Pathak (IPCC WG III TSU Senior Scientist) \nh. 14:00 – Near-term policy to realise the transition: policy structure\, carbon pricing\, and distributional effects\nNavroz Dubash (WG III Coordinating Lead Author\, Chapter 15) \nh. 14:10 – What have policies already delivered?\nMichael Grubb (WG III Coordinating Lead Author\, Chapter 1) –  Virtual Speaker \nh. 14:15 – Questions from the floor\nAll speakers\, moderated by Fatima Denton \nClosing\nh. 14:45 Closing remarks – Fatima Denton \n\n\n \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cop-27-event-ipcc-session-on-delivering-a-sustainable-future-feasibility-and-policy/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221110T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221110T133000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221107T092648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221107T092845Z
UID:9548-1668081600-1668087000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:COP 27 event | The transmission of climate impacts through international trade: implications for the EU
DESCRIPTION:The historical evidence and the economic literature confirm that international trade can play an important role in smoothing negative economic shocks experienced by a country. There is\, however\, a growing body of evidence that trade can also act as a transmission channel for localized crises\, especially those affecting major importers or exporters of key commodities. This session will present analysis of these dynamics in the context of climate change\, assessing the potential\, trade related\, cascading macroeconomic and sectoral effects on the EU\, triggered by impacts on agricultural commodities\, energy demand\, and supply chain stresses associated with the interruption of important maritime trade nodes. The effects of  these dynamics on food markets will also be discussed\, through case studies of  international food systems and Brazilian soy. \n  \nSPEAKERS \nFrancesco Bosello\, EIEE \nEmilie Stokeld\, Research Assistant\, SEI York \nJoe Simpson\, Research Assistant\, SEI York \nRichard King\, Senior Research Fellow\, Environment and Society Programme\,  Chatham House \nRania Zaatour\, Postdoctoral Researcher\, Potsdam Institute for Climate  Impact Research (PIK) \n\nCOP27 Cascading Climate Risks Virtual Pavilion   \nIn 2022\, the direct impacts of climate change – such as droughts\, floods\, and  wildfires – have become impossible to ignore.\nHowever\, these impacts can also have knock-on effects which are less immediately  visible: effects that cross borders and continents\, escalating through security  relations\, international trade\, financial markets\, international aid operations or  migration.\nSuch complex chains are set to have increasingly significant impacts on our  societies as the world experiences the effects of a changing climate.\nGaining an understanding of them\, and the ways in which they can be mitigated and adapted to\, is crucial as we move into an uncertain future.\nThe COP27 Cascading Climate Risks Virtual Pavilion\, hosted by Chatham House’s  Environment and Society Programme offers the opportunity to explore these emerging dynamics with experts in the field.\nTaking place over two days during the COP27 climate conference\, the pavilion  convenes researchers and stakeholders from CASCADES\, an interdisciplinary research project devoted to the analysis of the cross-border impacts of climate change.\nSupported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme\, CASCADES applies state-of-the-art quantitative and qualitative research and stakeholder engagement approaches to identify critical areas of concern for  European societies and EU policy and explore different solutions.\nPlease note that\, with the exception of the Adaptation Without Borders event which is taking place in a hybrid format\, all events are online. \nAccess to the pavilion is entirely online\, and no UNFCCC accreditation is required. \n\nHOW TO PARTICIPATE \nOnline via Chatham House COP27 Cascading Climate Risks Virtual Pavilion\nRegistration: https://chathamhouse.cplus.live/auth/sign-up/cop27-cascading-climate-risks-virtual-pavilion
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cop-27-event-the-transmission-of-climate-impacts-through-international-trade-implications-for-the-eu/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221028T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221028T170000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221028T090329Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221028T090329Z
UID:9513-1666944000-1666976400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:Achieving an 80% carbon-free electricity system in China by 2035
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Jiang Lin\, University of California\, Berkeley (bio) \nAchieving an 80% carbon-free electricity system in China by 2035 (paper) \nAbstract: Dramatic reductions in solar\, wind\, and battery storage costs create new opportunities to reduce emissions and costs in China’s electricity sector\, beyond current policy goals. This study examines the cost\, reliability\, emissions\, public health\, and employment implications of increasing the share of non-fossil fuel (“carbon free”) electricity generation in China to 80% by 2035. The analysis uses state-of-the-art modeling with high resolution load\, wind\, and solar inputs. The study finds that achieving an 80% carbon-free electricity system in China by 2035 could reduce wholesale electricity costs\, relative to a current policy baseline\, while maintaining high levels of reliability\, reducing deaths from air pollution\, and increasing employment. In our 80% scenario\, wind and solar generation capacity reach 3 TW and battery storage capacity reaches 0.4 TW by 2035\, implying a rapid scale-up in these resources that will require changes in policy targets\, markets and regulation\, and land use policies.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/achieving-an-80-carbon-free-electricity-system-in-china-by-2035/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221026T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221026T163000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221014T152732Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221129T143351Z
UID:9454-1666796400-1666801800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:SWEEEP Webinar series - Rohini Pande
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Rohini Pande\, Yale University\nTitle Money (Not) to Burn: Payments for Ecosystem Services to Reduce Crop Residue Burning \nAbstract  \nParticulate matter reduces life expectancy across India. We use a randomized con-trolled trial in the Indian state of Punjab to evaluate the effectiveness of conditionalcash transfers (also known as payments for ecosystem services\, or PES) in reducingcrop residue burning\, which is a major contributor to the region’s poor air quality.Credit constraints and distrust may make farmers less likely to comply with standardPES contracts\, which only pay farmers after verification of compliance. We randomizepaying a portion upfront and unconditionally. We observe high contract take-up forboth types of contracts. Despite lower compliance incentives\, farmers offered partialupfront payment are 8-11 percentage points more likely to comply with the contract\,significantly more than farmers who receive the standard contract. Non-burning mea-sures derived from satellite imagery indicate that while upfront PES payments reducedoverall burning\, standard PES payments were infra-marginal. We also show that\, giventhe Indian context\, conditional cash transfers to farmers that have an upfront compo-nent are a cost-effective way to improve India’s air quality.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/sweeep-webinar-series-rohini-pande/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221024
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221027
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220707T143720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220707T144830Z
UID:9295-1666569600-1666828799@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:AdJUST - kick-off meeting
DESCRIPTION:AdJUST – kick-off meeting will take place in Milan\, on the 24th-26th of October \nAdJUST is a transdisciplinary European consortium whose objective is to achieve a step-change in societal understanding of the distributive repercussions of the transition to climate neutrality\, and to identify effective and actively-supported policy interventions to accompany climate action so that no-one is left behind. To do this\, AdJUST combines research approaches from complementary disciplines with a continuous social dialogue\, ensuring that the project practices open science\, models procedural justice\, and builds understanding\, trust\, and capacity among citizens and other stakeholders concerning the transition to climate neutrality. AdJUST engages European public bodies\, industry\, civil society\, and researchers—i.e. the quadruple helix—to design and promote a shared vision\, inspiring them towards the common goal of achieving climate neutrality. It relies on state-of-the-art economic assessment tools\, statistical analysis\, and research approaches from other Social Sciences & Humanities (SSH) disciplines—including political science\, business management\, public administration\, political theory\, philosophy\, and ethics—to generate methodologically-sound research results on the full range of challenges of the just transition. These comprise technical\, economic\, and social/equity dimensions for firms\, workers\, households\, and public bodies\, and the potential distributional impacts of the EU Green Deal\, NextGenerationEU\, and Fit for 55—EU Packages henceforth.\nAdJUST will use this knowledge to produce a set of actionable and context-specific policy recommendations—complementing the Just Transition Fund and the Social Climate Fund—to effectively manage competitiveness and distributional trade-offs associated with the transition across Europe\, and in specific countries and sectors.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/adjust-kick-off-meeting/
LOCATION:Milan
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221020T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221020T130000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20221012T120428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221012T120428Z
UID:9435-1666267200-1666270800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:DISTRIBUTIONAL CONSEQUENCES OF CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON RESIDENTIAL ENERGY DEMAND: TWO APPROACHES AND TWO COUNTRIES
DESCRIPTION:Speaker\nLorenza Campagnolo\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and CMCC – ECIP Division \nModerator\nJohannes Emmerling\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, CMCC – SEME Division\nAbstract\nAdjusting energy demand in response to climate change or weather variation is a common form of adaptation; what is scarcely analysed are the distributional consequences of this adaptive behaviour on household income distribution and welfare. This topic will be examined using two different methodologies in two very different countries.\nThe first approach relies on a recursive-dynamic general equilibrium model combined with a sequential arithmetic micro-simulation module and it evaluates the macroeconomic and distributional implications for Italian households and regions under climate change. Acknowledging the limitations of this methodology\, it highlights the heterogeneous effect of climate warming across households and its implications on regional energy poverty.\nThe second approach uses microdata to develop a multi-household recursive-dynamic CGE model for India. Decile-specific households are directly represented inside the model. The amount of energy for adaptation in response to rising temperatures is an endogenous behaviour taking place at the household level. The analysis highlights the direct implications of changes in household energy expenditure on income distribution and other welfare indicators.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/distributional-consequences-of-climate-change-impacts-on-residential-energy-demand-two-approaches-and-two-countries/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221010
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221014
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220509T083037Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220509T100618Z
UID:9111-1665360000-1665705599@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:NAVIGATE - Project meeting
DESCRIPTION:NAVIGATE partners will meet after more than 3 years for an in-person meeting in Potsdam at PIK headquarter! \nThe project started with the kick-off meeting in September 2019 and after that\, only online project meetings were organized.\nThe overall objective of the project NAVIGATE is to develop the next generation of integrated assessment models that can directly support the design and evaluation of EU and international climate policies and inform the alignment of climate action with sustainable development goals. To achieve this objective\, NAVIGATE aims to advance IAM capabilities in key areas for climate policy support. \nIn particular\, NAVIGATE will: \n\nsubstantially improve the representation of transformative processes in interlinked social\, technological and economic systems;\ndevelop a new capability to represent transformative changes in consumer goods and services;\nsubstantially improve the modelling of individual sector transformations in energy\, industry\, transport\, buildings\, and agriculture;\ndevelop a new capability to capture spatial and social heterogeneity;\ndeepen the integrated assessment of mitigation pathways in terms of a multi-dimensional assessment of costs\, benefits due to avoided impacts\, and co-benefits due to interaction with other sustainable development goals;\nimprove transparency\, legitimacy and usability of IAM results for users such as policy makers\, businesses\, civil society organizations\, as well as experts from related disciplines interested in using IAM results for climate policy analysis.\n\nTo this end\, NAVIGATE plans to make a significant investment in a targeted stakeholder dialogue.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/navigate-project-meeting-2/
LOCATION:Postdam
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221005
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221008
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220929T102500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220929T102500Z
UID:9420-1664928000-1665187199@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:European Climate and Energy Modelling Platform 2022
DESCRIPTION:Acting on the ambitions to a net-zero EU: roadblocks\, challenges\, and opportunities\nThe annual ECEMP conference brings together Europe’s climate and energy modelling community over a three-day period in a forum for deep exchange of research and modelling practice and varied discussions. The event will feature a balanced mix of high-level panel discussions and interactive workshop sessions to enable a peer-reviewed digest of models and policy insights for the transformation of the European energy system. The ECEMP 2022 conference will be a platform for exchange among researchers and modelling teams from across Europe; from H2020 projects\, representatives of the European Commission as well as partners from industry and civil society. \n\nIn agreement with the European Commission\, the former EMP-E Conference has adopted a new name\, “European Climate and Energy Modelling Platform (ECEMP)”\, to consider the increasing role of climate policies and climate change and their impact on energy demand and supply planning. \nThis year’s conference will be planned again as an online event\, due to uncertainties regarding the possibility of physical meetings. We will set up the same possibilities for interaction as last year to ensure an engaging\, policy-oriented and enjoyable conference experience. \nThe original EMP-E was created in 2017 and has since been organised on a yearly basis by the H2020 Energy Modelling group – a group of projects funded by the European Commission’s Research and Innovation Programme. This year\, the event is coordinated by ECEMF – the European Climate and Energy Modelling Forum\, with support of SENTINEL\, NAVIGATE\, WHY\, OpenENTRANCE\, PLANET\, CINTRAN\, PARIS REINFORCE\, EMB3RS\, and newTRENDs. The conference does not have a registration fee as it is funded by the European Commission. The projects contributing to the conference have received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme. \n  \nDays and themes\nDay 1: Energy security and geopolitics for fossil and low-carbon fuels \nDay 2: Innovation\, societal and technical changes for Net Zero \nDay 3: The latest IPCC findings and implications for national and short term policies \n  \nAll ECEMP 2022 presenters are invited to submit their papers to a special issue in Energy Strategy Review and Open Research Europe. The link can be found here. \nOrganising Projects
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/european-climate-and-energy-modelling-platform-2022-2/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221004T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221004T130000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220929T095358Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220929T095358Z
UID:9416-1664884800-1664888400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF-CMCC EIEE Webinar - Bento
DESCRIPTION:Title: Why do inefficient policies persist? Evidence from Energy Subsidies in Brazil \nSpeaker: Antonio M. Bento\, University of Southern California and NBER\nModerator: Luis Sarmiento\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici \nAuthors:\nAntonio M. Bento (University of Southern California and NBER)\nClaudio Lucinda (University of Sao Paulo)\nNoah Miller (University of Southern California) \nabstract: Policymakers often rely on energy subsidies as a strategy for to control inflation\, and transferring wealth to sub-groups of the population. Once introduced\, these subsidies tend to persist in time. Taking advantage of an unexpected announcement to phase out a persistent energy subsidy in fuel markets in Brazil\, we estimate its effects to Petrobras – brazil’s main oil company controlled by the government\, in an event-study setting. We then embed these econometric estimates into an equilibrium model to examine the overall costs\, the distributional impacts\, and political economy considerations of this program.\nOur central result implies that the continuation of the energy subsidy would have resulted in an overall cost to Petrobras of approximately $18.827 billion Brazilian reais. This subsidy would have transferred approximately $9.088 billion to consumers. For every dollar transferred to consumers via an artificially fixed lower gasoline prices\, the distortionary cost of was roughly $1\, and many orders of magnitude higher than other alternative subsidies that don’t protect consumers against fluctuations in international crude oil prices or cash transfers. Further\, although the political coalition that supported the government would have likely benefited more from these other alternative instruments\, the highly inefficient price freeze persisted\, which is consistent with a policymakers with risk averse preferences for policy change.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-eiee-webinar-bento/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220922T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220922T143000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220915T142547Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220915T142547Z
UID:9388-1663851600-1663857000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:The Global Climate Policy Partnership
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the launch event of the Global Climate Policy Partnership\, a global network of research institutions helping major economies and businesses achieve ambitious climate goals. During this webinar we’ll delve into a crucial component of the climate challenge: the manufacturing sector. While one-fifth of global carbon dioxide emissions come from this sector\, structuring policies to reduce these emissions is complicated by the fact that manufactured products are often traded on competitive international markets. National policies designed to reduce emissions inevitably raise the cost of production and can lead to lost domestic and international competitiveness\, and the leakage of emissions to nations with less stringent emission reduction policies. \nBoth the European Union and the United States are developing policies that would impose tariffs on imported primary commodities and complex goods from nations deemed to have weak industrial emissions limitation policies. This virtual event\, part of the Climate Week NYC 2022 activations\, will bring together global experts to review current policy proposals and discuss their implications for the climate challenge. \nSpeakers\n\nKeigo Akimoto\, Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth\nJos Delbeke\, European University Institute School of Transnational Governance\nCarolyn Fischer\, Resources for the Future\, World Bank\nMichael Jakob\, Ecologic Institute\nSuzi Kerr\, Environmental Defense Fund\nRoberto Schaeffer\, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro\nRaymond Kopp\, Resources for the Future (Moderator)
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/the-global-climate-policy-partnership/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220921T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220921T163000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220803T083953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221014T151136Z
UID:9302-1663772400-1663777800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:SWEEEP Webinar series – Florian Oswald
DESCRIPTION:Title: Fiscal Policy for Climate Change \nSpeaker: Florian Oswald\, Sciences Po University\, France\nModerator: Severin Reissl\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, Centro Euro Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici\, Italy\n \nAuthors: François Le Grand\, Florian Oswald\, Xavier Ragot and Aurélien Saussay\n \nAbstract: Fiscal policy offers a number of levers to reduce carbon emissions. Climate change mitigation can for example be\nimplemented through carbon taxation on the production or consumption side\, or through debt-financed public investments in\nemission-reducing infrastructure. Yet these various instruments may differ significantly in their cost-effectiveness in reducing\nemissions and in their distributional impacts among households. We develop a macroeconomic heterogeneous-agent model with environmental externalities to address both of these questions. In this model\, households derive utility from the consumption of carbon-intensive and clean goods\, and from the environmental damages resulting from CO2 emissions. In addition\, CO2 emissions affect productivity and thus relative prices. We use household data on the distribution carbon-intensive goods consumption to estimate preference parameters. Starting from a realistic fiscal structure\, we then implement various tax reforms to analyze their effects on both CO2 emissions and consumption along the consumption distribution.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/sweeep-webinar-series-florian-oswald/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220920
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220921
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220810T145811Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220810T145811Z
UID:9333-1663632000-1663718399@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:Understanding and navigating adjustment frictions in the green transition
DESCRIPTION:Annual Research Conference 2022 \nOrganised since 2004\, the 2022 edition of the Annual Research Conference (ARC) is co-organised by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) and the Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs (DG ECFIN). ARC is the forum of excellence where European Institutions exchange knowledge and engage in dialogue with researchers at academic institutions and think tanks\, practitioners at civil society organisations and citizens. \nThis year\, the JRC and DG ECFIN invite Conference participants to discuss how to turn green the European way: keeping cutting the edge while remaining social and fair. \nConference participants shall listen to speakers discuss different aspects of a successful green transition and address questions on \n\nhow to design appropriate policies and instruments to incentivize a green transition;\nhow to change production and consumption patterns;\nhow to engineer the necessary private and public investment/technological transformation\, and\nhow to bring about the necessary innovation and human capital accumulation.\n\nAll this\, while at the same time preserving social cohesion and the cohesion of the EU. \nJoin us in this year’s knowledge exchange\, be informed. Be part of the ARC22. \nThe conference is hybrid and takes place online and in Seville\, Spain at CaixaForum \n  \nProgramme\n\n20 September 2022\n12:00 – 17:00\nRegistration\n\n13:45 – 14:00\nOpening\n\nPaolo Gentiloni\, European Commissioner for Economy\nMaarten Verwey\, Director General Economic & Financial Affairs\, European Commission\nStephen Quest\, Director General Joint Research Centre\, European Commission \n\n14:00 – 14:40\nKeynote\n\nOttmar Edenhofer\, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) \n\n14:40 – 15:00\nCoffee break – Poster Session\n15:00 – 17:00\nParallel sessions\n\nUnderstanding and navigating adjustment frictions in the green transition\nModerator: Elena Verdolini\, EIEE and University of Brescia \nBarbara Annichiarico\, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”\nClimate Policies\, Macroprudential Regulation and the Welfare Cost of Business Cycles\nDiscussant: Katheline Schubert \, Paris School of Economics \nGustav Fredriksson\, ETH Zürich\nUnemployment and the cost of climate policy\nDiscussant: Jan Witajewski-Baltvilks\, University of Warsaw \nHendrik Schuldt\, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)\nFinancing the low-carbon transition: the impact of financial frictions on clean investment\nDiscussant: Magdalena Rola-Janicka\, Tilburg University \nGreen Policy Design\nModerator: Leen Hordijk\, Wageningen University (Emeritus) \nLorenzo Forni\, University of Padua and Prometeia Associazione\nFiscal policies for a sustainable recovery and a green transformation\nDiscussant: Simona Pojar\, Directorate-General for Economic & Financial Affairs\, European Commission \nSimon J. Black\, International Monetary Fund\nThe carbon price equivalence of climate mitigation policies\nDiscussant: Carolyn Fischer\, Amsterdam University & World Bank \nMelina Papoutsi\, European Central Bank\nHow unconventional is green monetary policy?\nDiscussant: Dirk Schoenmaker\, Erasmus University Rotterdam \n  \n17:00 \n\nEnd of day one
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/understanding-and-navigating-adjustment-frictions-in-the-green-transition/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220915T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220915T133000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220803T090812Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230323T094448Z
UID:9306-1663243200-1663248600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF- CMCC- EDITS webinar - Stefan Pauliuk
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Stefan Pauliuk\, University of Freiburg\, Germany.  \nModerator: Laurent Drouet\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui\nCambiamenti Climatici\, Italy \nTitle: Reductions in material production induced by demand-side strategies: Implications for sustainable development \nAbstract: Growing in-use stocks of materials in the technosphere are essential for further human development\, especially in emerging economies\, but also for the energy transition and digital transformation in the Global North. At the same time\, growing in-use stocks are a major obstacle for a circular economy and they are major drivers of environmental destruction and GHG emissions from material production from primary resources.\nDemand-side solutions from efficiency and sufficiency strategies can lead to reduced need for new products and thus new materials. I\npresent modelling results for the LED scenario (Grubler et al. 2018) for the impact of demand-side strategies for passenger vehicles and buildings on material production and related GHG emissions. I will explain the data and assumptions that went into our scenarios and\npoint out the shortcomings of the modelling approach used. The discussion can then focus on approaches for consistent and inter-disciplinary low demand modelling of industrial output and material production\, in particular. \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-edits-webinar-stefan-pauliuk/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220914
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220916
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220707T143159Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220707T144920Z
UID:9290-1663113600-1663286399@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:ELEVATE Kick-off meeting
DESCRIPTION:ELEVATE – kick-off meeting will take place in The Hague\, on the 14th and 15th of September.  \nELEVATE is a project funded by the European Union’s Horizon Europe programme and the consortium consists of 20 partners and brings together leading research groups to support climate policymaking within and outside the EU. These research groups are involved in modelling international climate policy\, national policies\, social science\, policy analysis\, environmental assessment\, and stakeholder engagement. \nWorld-leading institutions in globally integrated assessment modelling are a central part of the ELEVATE consortium (IIASA\, PBL\, PIK\, CMCC\, E3M\, NIES\, KU\, UFRJ/COPPETEC\, and UMD). This means that the consortium involves all teams that have played a leading role in the coordination and development of the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways\, which serve to integrate the assessment of mitigation\, adaptation and impacts research across the climate change science community. \nTo implement the Paris Agreement’s goals\, greenhouse gas emissions need to be reduced to net zero around 2050. However\, current policies are still insufficient to reach this target and net-zero promises by countries are generally lacking concrete roadmaps on how to reach them. ELEVATE aims to create a robust scientific understanding required to strengthen NDCs and current climate policies toward reaching net-zero emissions. For this\, ELEVATE brings together a unique multidisciplinary consortium of leading international and national modelling teams\, climate policy experts and social scientists. The consortium aims to interact directly with policymakers to define information gaps and attractive policies\, thus enhancing the usability of the knowledge base and stimulating mutual learning. Based on this\, the consortium will systematically assess NDCs and policies at the global and national levels to identify current progress and good practice policies. Subsequently\, ELEVATE will look into a range of critical enabling factors related to sectoral action\, international climate policy and the relationship with justice and sustainable development that can be leveraged to strengthen action. \n  \nMore info will be soon available.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/elevate-kick-off-meeting/
LOCATION:The Hague
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220705T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220705T130000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220615T103224Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220616T135930Z
UID:9258-1657022400-1657026000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC-EIEE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Title: Promoting better lives is good for climate: Potential co-benefits of digital convergence and sharing in consumer goods \n\nSpeaker: Nuno Bento\, Centre for Socioeconomic and Territorial Studies\, ISCTE – University Institute of Lisbon\nModerator: Cristina Cattaneo\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment\, CMCC \n\nAbstract \nAccess to modern energy services (entertainment\, food preparation\, etc.) provided by consumer goods remains unequal\, while growing adoption due to rising incomes in Global South increases energy demand and GHG emissions. The current model through which these energy services is provided is unsustainable and needs to evolve—a goal that emerging social and technological innovations can help to achieve. Digital convergence and sharing economy have potential to make access to appliances more affordable and efficient. This research estimates the effect of innovations around digital convergence and sharing in a highly granular\, bottom-up representation of appliances. We simulate changes in demand for materials and energy\, assuming decent living standards for all and global warming limited to 1.5ºC. By 2050\, these innovations would attenuate the increase in the number of appliances to 135% and reduce energy demand by 28%. These results demonstrate that we can provide decent living standards while advancing climate mitigation. \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcc-eiee-webinar/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220630
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220701
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220621T134702Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220621T135153Z
UID:9267-1656547200-1656633599@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:European Climate and Energy Modelling Platform 2022
DESCRIPTION:The deadline has been extended to June 30th!\nWe are collecting abstracts for oral presentations and posters to contribute to this year`s EMP-E Conference under its new name “European Climate and Energy Modelling Platform (ECEMP)”. In agreement with the European Commission\, we have adopted this new name to consider the increasing role of climate policies and climate change and their impact on energy demand and supply planning. \nThis year’s conference will be planned again as an online event\, due to uncertainties regarding the possibility of physical meetings. We will set up the same possibilities for interaction as last year to ensure an engaging\, policy-oriented and enjoyable conference experience. \nThis year\, the overarching topic is: Acting on the ambitions to a net-zero EU: roadblocks\, challenges and opportunities. \nThe registration portal is now available and the deadline for the paper submission is the 30th June 2022. \nLong abstracts are also accepted (minimum 1000 words).
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/european-climate-and-energy-modelling-platform-2022/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220629T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220629T153000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220411T113220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220617T083618Z
UID:9048-1656511200-1656516600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:Border Carbon Adjustments: drivers or impediments for climate ambition?
DESCRIPTION:Countries are increasingly pursuing climate plans consistent with reaching climate neutrality but with different levels of carbon pricing and regulatory effort. Against this backdrop of heterogeneous mitigation incentives\, Border Carbon Adjustments have been proposed to address competitiveness concerns\, to deter emission leakage\, and to encourage ambition\, by ensuring that imports face the same explicit or implicit carbon price faced by domestic producers in countries with more ambitious climate policies. However\, BCAs are institutionally complex\, the evidence of carbon leakage is limited\, and the implications for international cooperation and climate justice are not clear. The aim of this policy session is to assess the environmental and economic impact of border carbon adjustments. Panelists will discuss the potential role of BCAs to promote or deter climate ambition\, and to encourage emission reductions effectively and fairly. \nPanelists: \n\nKeigo Akimoto (Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth)\nFrancesco Bosello (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice; EIEE)\nJos Delbeke (European University Institute)\nCarolyn Fischer (World Bank)\nSuzi Kerr (Environmental Defense Fund)\nRaymond Kopp (Resources For the Future)\nBilly Pizer (Resources for the Future)\n\nThis event will be also streamed online. Further updates will be available soon. \nFor more info please visit http://www.eaere-conferences.org/index.php?p=324 \n  \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/border-carbon-adjustments-drivers-or-impediments-for-climate-ambition/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220628
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220702
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220317T104251Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220317T104436Z
UID:9017-1656374400-1656719999@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EAERE - Annual Conference
DESCRIPTION:We cordially invite you to the 27th Annual Conference of the European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE) to be held from the 28th of June to the 1st of July\, 2022. \nThe Conference will take place at the PalaCongressi of Rimini\, a lively and easily reachable location on the Italian Adriatic coast. The event will take place in person while allowing for online participation in a restricted number of sessions. \n  \nRegistrations are open! \n30 April 2022: Early registration deadline\n15 May 2022: Deadline by which presenting authors must be registered for inclusion in the programme\n24 June 2022: Registrations for online participation close \n  \nRegistration guidelines inclusive of registration fees are available on the Conference website. \nEAERE membership in the year 2022 is a requirement to attend the Conference. Non-members are requested to join EAERE as part of the Conference registration process. \nMay 15th\, 2022 is the deadline by which presenting authors must be registered for inclusion in the programme. \n!!! PLEASE NOTE !!! Participants (in particular those who have an accepted paper) are requested to use the same email account for the registration and for their Anymeets account (conference programme website). \nIn-person participation includes access to all scientific sessions. Presentations will take place in presence. \nOnline participation is in webinar mode and is restricted to the plenary sessions and to three policy sessions. Plenary sessions include the EAERE Awards Ceremony and plenary lectures. \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eaere-annual-conference/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220627T143000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220627T153000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220517T133746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220523T085631Z
UID:9192-1656340200-1656343800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC@Ca'Foscari  Seminar - Jennifer Dunn
DESCRIPTION:Title: Clues to the future of wastewater treatment under climate change and urbanization\n\nSpeaker: Jennifer Dunn\, Center for Engineering Sustainability and Resilience\, Northwestern-Argonne Institute of Science and Engineering \nModerator: Enrica De Cian\, CMCC@Ca’ Foscari\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and Venice Ca’ Foscari University \nAbstract: \nWater scarcity will increase as the planet warms. Coupled with increasing urbanization\, climate change will spur increased construction of wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) to provide clean drinking water as well as supply irrigation and other water consumption needs. Accordingly\, one effect of climate change will be to drive up energy consumption in the wastewater sector\, which may\, in turn\, drive up greenhouse gas emissions associated with water provision. This presentation will summarize three efforts to characterize emissions from WWTP and how they may change under climate change scenarios. First\, there have been several increasingly detailed efforts to inventory the wastewater sector in the United States.  We will describe our current efforts in this area as well as the state of WWTP inventory information for other countries and regions of interest including the EU\, India\, Brazil\, and Mexico. Second\, we will describe technology being developed through a National Science Foundation project led by Northwestern University to reduce nitrous oxide emissions from WWTPs.  Nitrous oxide is a potent greenhouse gas with a global warming potential approximately 300 times greater than carbon dioxide. We are using life cycle assessment to guide technology development towards process and product choices that drive these emissions down and limit greenhouse gases from a systems level that considers the entire WWTP. Finally\, we will describe our collaborations with Ca’ Foscari and the CMCC to enhance integrated assessment models’ treatment of the WWTP sector including how it will evolve as the climate changes and how it can represent emerging technology that can reduce the sector’s greenhouse gas emissions. \nSpeaker’s short bio: \nJennifer Dunn studies emerging technologies\, their energy and environmental impacts\, and their potential to influence air pollutant and greenhouse gas emissions\, water consumption\, and energy consumption at the economy-wide level. Particular technologies of interest include biofuels and bioproducts\, automotive lithium-ion batteries\, fuels and chemicals made from carbon capture and utilization technologies and from natural gas liquids\, and resource recovery from wastewater. She applies life cycle analysis as a key tool to evaluate emerging technologies. Dr. Dunn holds a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Michigan. Her undergraduate institution in the same field was Purdue University.  Jennifer holds a joint appointment in the Energy Systems Division of Argonne National Laboratory and is Associate Director of Northwestern’s Center for Engineering Sustainability and Resilience. \n\n\n\nHOW TO PARTICIPATE \nCMCC@Ca’Foscari Seminar – in presence and online\nAULA RADICE\, Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA Park\, Ground floor\nPlease note that on-site presence is strongly recommended to allow interactions during the Seminars.\nHowever\, we have a limited number of seats available\, so please\, let us know if you are attending in presence by quickly filling in the registration forms linked below at your earliest convenience. Thank you. \n\nORGANIZED BY: \nCMCC@Ca’Foscari
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcccafoscari-seminar-jennifer-dunn/
LOCATION:Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220627T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220627T110000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220517T133327Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220517T133440Z
UID:9187-1656324000-1656327600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC@Ca'Foscari Seminar - Maximilian Kotz
DESCRIPTION:Title: Macroeconomic climate damages. Resolving the locality of climate impacts in time and space  \nSpeaker: Maximilian Kotz\, Research Department IV Complexity Science\, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) \nModerator: Enrica De Cian\, CMCC@Ca’ Foscari\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and Venice Ca’ Foscari University \nAbstract: \nEconometric assessments of climate impacts are typically conducted at national and annual scales. However\, climate impacts can occur locally in both time and space. This demands an analysis with higher temporal and spatial detail to resolve both complex societal impact channels and anthropogenically forced changes. These details are crucial to a comprehensive evaluation of the costs of climate change and consequently to cost-benefit analyses of climate policy.\nIn this talk I will present recent advances and on-going work in this area\, the result of combining high resolution climate and economic data with mathematical re-formulations of climate impacts. These empirical assessments have identified aspects of the distribution of daily weather with detrimental macroeconomic effects\, for example from daily temperature variability and extreme daily rainfall. I will discuss these advances\, and their implications for the scale and distribution of macroeconomic damages under future climate change. \nSpeaker’s short bio: \nMaximilian Kotz is a doctoral researcher at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)\, working in Research Department IV Complexity Science. His work addresses the costs of climate change from both a physical and economic perspective. His research has been published in peer-reviewed journals including Nature\, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and Nature Climate Change. Prior to joining PIK\, he obtained his undergraduate and masters’ degree in physics from the University of Cambridge and completed research stays in the department of Environmental Science and Engineering at Caltech and the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Reading. \n\nHOW TO PARTICIPATE \nCMCC@Ca’Foscari Seminar – in presence and online\nAULA RADICE\, Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA Park\, Ground floor\nPlease note that on-site presence is strongly recommended to allow interactions during the Seminars.\nHowever\, we have a limited number of seats available\, so please\, let us know if you are attending in presence by quickly filling in the registration forms linked below at your earliest convenience. Thank you. \n\nORGANIZED BY: \nCMCC@Ca’Foscari
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcccafoscari-seminar-maximilian-kotz/
LOCATION:Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220629
DTSTAMP:20260401T164031
CREATED:20220407T134749Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220526T133842Z
UID:9035-1656288000-1656460799@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:The economics of a just and equitable transition - Pre-Conference Workshop
DESCRIPTION:  \nPre-conference Workshop of the 27th Annual EAERE Conference \nThe economics of a just and equitable transition \nHybrid Workshop: Onsite and online \n\nOrganizing committee: Jan Steckel (MCC) Massimo Tavoni (RFF-CMCC) Elena Verdolini (RFF-CMCC) \n\n\nThe programme of the Workshop in NOW available.\nRegister here!\n\n\nScope:The aim of this workshop is to discuss how methods in environmental and resource economics can contribute to assess and quantify the impact of the low carbon transition on certain parts of society\, and how they can be alleviated. It will present approaches to identify policies that can be put in place to correct pre–existing and transition–induced inequalities. The workshop will thus focus on issues related to employment\, distributional impacts of policies\, and public acceptance of the climate transition\, with the aim to foster a debate on the research and policy agenda focusing on the Just Transition.Addressing climate change will only be successful when related policies are perceived as fair and equitable. Climate change impacts will lead to severe economic losses\, unevenly distributed across countries and regions\, generations and individuals; they will aggravate existing inequalities and create new ones. Yet\, the costs associated with the energy transition or external shocks may also disproportionately burden vulnerable households\, firms\, communities and social groups. \nThe EAERE community has long addressed topics linked with the distributional impacts of climate change policies\, and their repercussions on and prospect for the labor market and the public perception around tradeoffs between mitigation and economic growth. In recent years\, novel methods have emerged to approach these topics. A deeper and meaningful dialogue can be fostered by building bridges between different research communities within and outside ofEAERE.\n\nProgram:The workshop has two aims. First\, it takes stock of the methods in economics and other social sciences which can contribute to an assessment of the Just Transition. It will explore how methodologies and assessment tools used in climate economics and modeling have been used to inform the debate regarding a just transition. Recent developments\, theoretical\, empirical and numerical\, will be discussed to highlight how different methodological approaches can contribute to the academic debate on key topics relevant for the Just Transition.Second\, it looks forward and discusses how to develop the Just Transition research agenda with the aim of informing the policy debate. This includes broadening the attention to methods and insights from other research fields\, as well as discussing how to use the available evidence to inform the current policy debate and identify key knowledge gaps and potential avenues for future research. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nFormat:The workshop is organized in three thematic sessions: Workforce and Employment\, Vulnerable Households and Firms\, and Public Acceptance. Each session will last approximately for one and half hours and will present short talks by invited speakers\, followed by discussion among participants. A final round table discussion will gather reaction from high–profile individuals engaged in research and policy making. \n\n\n\nSchedule: \n\nJune 27\, 2022\n\n15:00 – 15:30 Arrival and Welcome\n15:30 – 16:00 Workshop Rationale and Objectives. Jan Steckel\, Massimo Tavoni\, and Elena Verdolini16:00 – 17:30 Session 1: Workforce and Employment. Chair Francesco Vona (University of Milan and FEEM)(15 min) Johannes Emmerling (RFF–CMCC): Global Workforce Implications of the Climate Transition(15 min) Luke Haywood (MCC): The Welfare Costs of Job Loss and Decarbonization – Evidence from Germany’s Coal Phase Out(15 min) Misato Sato (LSE): Skill and Wage Gaps in the Low Carbon Transition(45 min) Discussion Moderated by Chair\n\n18:00 – 19:30: Drinks and Refreshments\n\nJune 28\, 2022\n9:00 – 10:30 Session 2: Vulnerable Households and Firms. Chair Jan Steckel (MCC)(15 min) Toon Vandyck (European Commission): Quantifying Impact Heterogeneity for the EU Green Deal(15 min) Carolyn Fischer (World Bank and RFF): Distributional Implications of Climate Policies: Evidence from the World Bank(15 min) Samson Mukanjari (IIIEE): Not Just a Transition(45 min) Discussion Moderated by Chair\n\n10:30 – 11:00: Coffee Break\n\n\n11:00 – 12:30 Session 3: Public Acceptance. Chair Massimo Tavoni (RFF–CMCC and Politecnico di Milano)(15 min) Italo Colantone (Bocconi University): The Political Sustainability of the Green Transition(15 min) Cristina Cattaneo (RFF–CMCC): Differentiated Impacts of Green Behavioural Interventions(15 min) Adrien Fabre (ETH Zürich): Fighting Climate Change: International Attitudes Toward Climate Policies(45 min) Discussion Moderated by Chair \n\n12:30 – 14:00: Lunch \n\n14:00 – 14:15: Keynote Address. Phoebe Koundouri (EAERE President and AthensUniversity of Economics and Business): Sustainable Development Solutions Network 2022 Senior Working Group Report14:15 – 15:45 Session 4: How Can Environmental Economics Research Inform the Policy Debate Around the Just Transition? Chair Elena Verdolini (RFF–CMCC and University of Brescia)Reflections from Previous Sessions: Francesco Vona\, Jan Steckel and Massimo TavoniRoundtable Discussion: Suzi Kerr (EDF)\, Elisa Lanzi (OECD)\, Ioana Petrescu (Harvard Kennedy School)\, Jay Rutovitz (University of Technology Sydney)\, Billy Pizer (RFF)\, Thomas Sterner (University of Gothenburg)\n\n\nThe programme of the Workshop in NOW available.\nRegister here.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/the-economics-of-a-just-and-equitable-transition/
LOCATION:Rimini
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/20211007142742_Logo.png
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220620
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220621
DTSTAMP:20260401T164032
CREATED:20220317T102931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220317T102931Z
UID:9014-1655683200-1655769599@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:ECEMP 2022 -Deadline submission
DESCRIPTION:The submission portal is now online! \nWe are collecting abstracts for oral presentations and posters to contribute to this year`s EMP-E Conference under its new name “European Climate and Energy Modelling Platform (ECEMP)”. In agreement with the European Commission\, we have adopted this new name to consider the increasing role of climate policies and climate change and their impact on energy demand and supply planning. \nThis year’s conference will be planned again as an online event\, due to uncertainties regarding the possibility of physical meetings. However\, we are still investigating options for a hybrid event and we will send communications by  April\, in case the decision of an online event changes. We will set up the same possibilities for interaction as last year to ensure an engaging\, policy-oriented and enjoyable conference experience. \nThis year\, the overarching topic is: Acting on the ambitions to a net-zero EU: roadblocks\, challenges and opportunities. \nThe deadline for submission is the 20th June 2022. \nWe encourage paper and poster abstract submissions which fit the following sub-themes: \nDays and themes\n\nDay 1: Mitigation\, adaptation and climate impacts\n\nInfluence of climate change on energy demands\, supply and infrastructure in the EU\nEnvironmental Assessment for energy modelling\nAccounting for climate change impacts on renewable resources\n\n\nDay 2: Innovation\, societal and technical changes for Net Zero\n\nSocio-economic impacts of the transition\nRole of energy consumers in the transition\nRole of hard-to-abate sectors\nRole of Hydrogen and e-fuels on the road to climate neutrality\nTransition to a sustainable\, zero-emission transportation system\nDigitization and other societal mega-trends\nEnergy consumption of large data centres\nEnergy security and geopolitical risks\n\n\nDay 3: Bridging national and European energy modelling to inform strategies for 2030\, 2040 and 2050\n\nNational Energy and Climate Modelling efforts and scenarios\nShort and medium term policy target implementation\nMulti-model comparisons as method for robust policy analysis\nDebate: Coherence between national and EU-wide modelling analyses for short\, medium and long term
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/ecemp-2022-deadline-submission/
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220617T143000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220617T153000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164032
CREATED:20220524T101832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220524T102017Z
UID:9223-1655476200-1655479800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC@Ca'Foscari - Jennifer Dunn
DESCRIPTION:Water-energy nexus in IAMs: Modelling wastewater treatment  \nSpeaker: Jennifer Dunn\, Center for Engineering Sustainability and Resilience\, Northwestern-Argonne Institute of Science and Engineering \nModerator: Enrica De Cian\, CMCC@Ca’ Foscari\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and Venice Ca’ Foscari University \nSpeaker’s short bio: \nJennifer Dunn studies emerging technologies\, their energy and environmental impacts\, and their potential to influence air pollutant and greenhouse gas emissions\, water consumption\, and energy consumption at the economy-wide level. Particular technologies of interest include biofuels and bioproducts\, automotive lithium-ion batteries\, fuels and chemicals made from carbon capture and utilization technologies and from natural gas liquids\, and resource recovery from wastewater. She applies life cycle analysis as a key tool to evaluate emerging technologies. Dr. Dunn holds a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Michigan. Her undergraduate institution in the same field was Purdue University.  Jennifer holds a joint appointment in the Energy Systems Division of Argonne National Laboratory and is Associate Director of Northwestern’s Center for Engineering Sustainability and Resilience. \n\nHOW TO PARTICIPATE \nCMCC@Ca’Foscari Seminar – in presence and online\nMeeting Room\, CMCC@Ca’Foscari offices\, VEGA\, Second floor
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcccafoscari-jennifer-dunn/
LOCATION:Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220616
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220617
DTSTAMP:20260401T164032
CREATED:20220517T135954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220523T131227Z
UID:9199-1655337600-1655423999@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:NAVIGATE-CHIPS -Stakeholders workshop
DESCRIPTION:NAVIGATE-CHIPS STAKEHOLDER WORKSHOP CLIMATE POLICY AND JUST TRANSITION \n  \nOver the next decades\, societies will be subject to large transformations related to climate change mitigation policies. These transformations will have differential effects in different locations as well as in different societal groups\, with the poor likely to experience the worst consequences. In turn\, this raises issues of the societal acceptability of mitigation policies and of the possibility of compensation of transformation costs through transfers. The workshop will highlight the distributive impacts of mitigation policies in the context of human development at different levels of global warming and along different socioeconomic pathways. However\, increasing capture of spatial and social heterogeneity in a rich scenario space also increases the complexity of research results and consequently the hurdle for their use by stakeholders. An exchange with stakeholders ensuring transparency\, usability and applicability of research outcomes becomes ever more crucial. The objective of this workshop will be to present results from the NAVIGATE and CHIPS projects pertaining to the impact of climate mitigation policies on inequality\, poverty and other Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The workshop also aims at establishing a dialogue with stakeholders on how to convey and disseminate research results on those issues. Identifying relevant aspects of mitigation policies and their impact is a key question in this dialogue. \nProgramme \n9:30-9:45 Welcome and introduction \nObjective of the morning: present preliminary results from the projects\, discuss them and gather feedback and questions. \n9:45-11:00 Session 1: Mitigation policies: inequality and acceptability (CHIPS) \nStellio Del Campo (MCC)\, “Inequality aversion for climate policy” \nJose Labeaga (UNED)\, “Implications of carbon taxation on inequality and poverty in Mexico” \nThomas Sterner (U. Gothenburg)\, “Understanding the resistance to carbon taxes” \nNicolas Taconet (PIK)\, “Evolution of within-region inequalities in low-carbon mitigation pathways: Insights from REMIND” \nMarie Young Brun (CNRS\, PSE\, CIRED)\, “Political economy of carbon taxes” \n11:00-11:30 Coffee break \n11:30-12:30 Session 2: Distributive effects of mitigation policies (NAVIGATE) \nJohannes Emmerling (CMCC)\, “Inequality – the incidence of climate change and policies” \nSimon Feindt (TU Berlin\, MCC)\, “The impact of EU carbon pricing on households – analysis of distributional consequences between and within countries” \nPanagiotis Fragkos (E3Modelling) (remotely)\, “Assessing the distributional impacts of ambitious EU climate policies and measures to enhance equality” \nBjoern Soergel (PIK) (remotely)\, “A sustainable development pathway for climate action within the UN 2030 Agenda” \n12:30-14:00 Lunch \nObjective of the afternoon: discuss the use of the results for stakeholders\, policy implications\, and ways to communicate and disseminate the results to best serve stakeholders’ needs. \n14:00-15:15 Group work “Policy relevant results on distributional issues” \nFocus group structured around a set of questions to reflect on the implications of the results from the projects\, the potential avenues to communicate the results and disseminate them. \nGroup 1: Dimensions of distributional effects: local\, global\, social groups \nGroup 2: Sectoral effects and income distributions \nGroup 3: Policy tools to address distributive effects \n15:15-15:30 Coffee break \n15:30-16:45 Panel and general discussion \nPanel: Lucas Chancel (World Inequality Lab)\, Antoine Godin (AFD)\, Félix Mailleux (European Trade Union Confederation)\, Quentin Parrinello (Oxfam)\, Brian Walsh (World Bank) \n16:45-17:00 Conclusion
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/navigate-chips-stakeholders-workshop/
LOCATION:Maison des Sciences Économiques\, Paris
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220615T121500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220615T140000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164032
CREATED:20220517T132508Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220517T134020Z
UID:9172-1655295300-1655301600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC@Ca'Foscari - Ian Sue Wing
DESCRIPTION:Title: Climate Change Impacts on Morbidity: Preliminary Insights from California Hospital Admissions Data \nSpeaker: IAN SUE WING | Ca’ Foscari University\, S. Giobbe\, Department of Economics\, Venice \nSpeaker’s short bio: \nIan Sue Wing is Associate Professor in the Department of Earth & Environment at Boston University. He conducts research and teaching on the economic analysis of energy and environmental policy\, with an emphasis on climate change and computational general equilibrium (CGE) analysis of economic adjustment to policy and natural environmental shocks. His current research focuses on characterizing the broader economic consequences of climate change impacts in a variety of areas (energy systems\, agriculture and forestry\, and human health)\, assessing the implications for society’s capacity to mitigate future emissions of greenhouse gases\, and simulating the regional economic impacts of natural disasters. Much of this work involves articulating the structural linkages between CGE models and econometric models of climate impacts\, or bottom-up science- or engineering-based process simulations of energy systems\, agro-ecosystems\, and natural hazards. He has been supported by grants from the California Energy Commission\, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science\, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency\, the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Science Foundation. He has been a member of advisory and review panels for the DOE\, the Environmental Protection Agency\, the National Research Council and NSF\, and serves as a contributing author to the IPCC AR5 and the U.S. National Climate Assessment. \n  \nThe seminar can be attended also remotely\, connecting to ZOOM \nID riunione: 886 3904 8320
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcccafoscari-ian-sue-wing/
LOCATION:Meeting room 1 – Campus Economico San Giobbe
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/22_Seminario-Sue-Wing_15.06.2022.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220610T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220610T153000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164032
CREATED:20220517T130627Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220517T134051Z
UID:9164-1654869600-1654875000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC@Ca'Foscari - Ian Sue Wing
DESCRIPTION:Title: Cloud Computing: Revolutionizing Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation Research \nSpeaker: Ian Sue Wing\, Department of Earth & Environment\, Boston University \nModerator: Enrica De Cian\, CMCC@Ca’ Foscari\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and Venice Ca’ Foscari University \nSpeaker’s short bio: \nIan Sue Wing is Associate Professor in the Department of Earth & Environment at Boston University. He conducts research and teaching on the economic analysis of energy and environmental policy\, with an emphasis on climate change and computational general equilibrium (CGE) analysis of economic adjustment to policy and natural environmental shocks. His current research focuses on characterizing the broader economic consequences of climate change impacts in a variety of areas (energy systems\, agriculture and forestry\, and human health)\, assessing the implications for society’s capacity to mitigate future emissions of greenhouse gases\, and simulating the regional economic impacts of natural disasters. Much of this work involves articulating the structural linkages between CGE models and econometric models of climate impacts\, or bottom-up science- or engineering-based process simulations of energy systems\, agro-ecosystems\, and natural hazards. He has been supported by grants from the California Energy Commission\, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science\, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency\, the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Science Foundation. He has been a member of advisory and review panels for the DOE\, the Environmental Protection Agency\, the National Research Council and NSF\, and serves as a contributing author to the IPCC AR5 and the U.S. National Climate Assessment. \n\nHOW TO PARTICIPATE \nSeminar – in presence and online\nAula Funzione – Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA\, ground floor \nPlease note that on-site presence is strongly recommended to allow interactions during the Seminars.\nHowever\, we have a limited number of seats available\, so please\, let us know if you are attending in presence by quickly filling in the registration forms linked below at your earliest convenience. Thank you. \n\nORGANIZED BY: \nCMCC@Ca’Foscari
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcccafoscari-seminar/
LOCATION:Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Screenshot-2022-05-17-at-15.06.13.png
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