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METHOD:PUBLISH
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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BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Europe/Rome
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20220327T010000
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BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20221030T010000
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BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20230326T010000
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TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20231029T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231214T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231214T170000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20231127T150606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231204T075407Z
UID:10399-1702566000-1702573200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF – CMCC – NAVIGATE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:How to achieve a rapid\, fair\, and efficient transformation to net zero emissions. Key findings from the NAVIGATE project.\nThe NAVIGATE project comes to an end in December 2023. During the past four years\, the project partners improved capabilities of Integrated Assessment Models in a number of ways and arrived at policy relevant insights on how to achieve a rapid\, fair\, and efficient transformation to net zero emissions. During the webinar\, NAVIGATE partners will present insights into how decarbonisation can be accelerated in different sectors (such as industry\, buildings and transport) and how distributional impacts of climate change and climate change mitigation measures can be minimised. \nAgenda:\n\n3.00-3.40 pm: Presentations on research findings from the NAVIGATE project\n \n\nNAVIGATE overview (Elmar Kriegler\, PIK)\nThe scope for accelerating emission reductions with advanced mitigation action (Jessica Strefler\, PIK)\nHard-to-abate industry sector CO2 emissions in Paris compatible scenarios: a model comparison study (Nico Bauer\, PIK)\nThe role of demand-side measures in climate mitigation pathways (Rik van Heerden\, PBL)\n\nQ&A \n3.40-4.10 pm: Presentations on research findings from the NAVIGATE project\n \n\nDistributional implications of climate policies and impacts (Johannes Emmerling\, RFF-CMCC)\nAssessing the socio-economic impacts of different ways to recycle revenues from carbon pricing (Panagiotis Fragkos\, E3M)\nExploiting synergies between climate\, land\, energy and water related SDGs (Isabela Schmidt Tagomori\, PBL)\n\nQ&A \nWrap-up \nShort break \n4.20-4.50 pm: Breakout sessions on accelerating decarbonisation in different sectors \n\nIndustry – Nico Bauer\, PIK\nBuildings – Bas van Ruijven\, IIASA\nRoad transport – Sonia Yeh\, Chalmers\nShipping –Eduardo Müller-Casseres\, COPPETEC\nAgriculture –Mathijs Harmsen\, PBL\n\n\n\n  \nRegistration required.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-navigate-webinar-5/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231214T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231214T120000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20231205T201302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231213T131143Z
UID:10411-1702548000-1702555200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF - CMCC - EDITS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:ENERGY AND WELL-BEING. THE INDIAN CASE STUDY\nTime: 14.30 to 16.30 pm (IST) – 10.00 am to 12.00 pm (CET)\nImproving well-being for all is a prime social target in the Global South and should be prioritized in many ways. The seminar “Energy and well-being. The Indian case study” explores the intricate relationship between energy and well-being within the context of India. The Consortium of the University of Plymouth (UoP\, UK)\, the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA\, Austria)\, Prayas Energy Group (India)\, The Center for Study of Science\, Technology and Policy (CSTEP\, India)\, University of Oxford (UK)\, Central European University (CEU\, Austria)\, and PBL (Netherlands) are excited to invite you to a hybrid seminar. The seminar is designed for professionals\, policymakers\, researchers\, and individuals passionate about understanding and contributing to the synergy between energy and well-being in the Indian context. The seminar will connect dedicated local and international experts under the umbrella of the “Energy Demand changes Induced by Technological and Social innovations (EDITS)” initiative. Distinguished scholars will share their insights on the opportunities to provide well-being to all and at the same time limit exacerbant greenhouse-gas emissions\, shedding light on the multifaceted dynamics that influence the well-being of individuals in the presence or absence of sustainable and accessible energy resources. \n  \nAgenda:\n14.30-14.45: Welcome and presentation of High with low. The India case study (Dr. Souran Chatterjee and Dr. Alessio Mastrucci) \n14.45-15.00: Indian energy scenario – Prayas (Energy group) \n15.00-15.15: Indian LED scenario with high well-being (CSTEP) \n15.15-15.30: Dr. Aman Malik\, CEEW \n15.30-15.45: Indian energy projections (Dr. Vassilis Daioglou\, PBL) \n15.45-16.30: Q&A and closing remarks (Dr. Souran Chatterjee and Dr. Alessio Mastrucci) \n  \nIn-person attendance:\nVenue: Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi \nAddress: Meeting Room No. 3D1\, Indian institute of technology Delhi\, HAUZ KHAS\, NEW DELHI-110016\, India \nIn-person registration: Not later than 11 December at this LINK \n  \nOnline attendance:\nRegister in advance for the Zoom meeting at: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZAld–vrzgiHtDLYB4RQSHDr0SLeOQ2zClm
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/edits-webinar/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231122T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231122T150000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20231020T152724Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250715T075451Z
UID:10377-1700661600-1700665200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:PRISMA Stakeholder Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Climate Impacts on country-level biodiversity\, ecosystems services and GDP: recent research and stakeholder views\nSpeaker: Johannes Emmerling (RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment\, CMCC Foundation) \nModerator: Heather Grabbe (Bruegel\, and visiting professor at University College London and KU Leuven) \nAbstract: Ecosystems bring benefits to human well-being\, including both those with market value\, that can be bought and sold\, and those without\, that are intangible and non-monetary in nature. Climate change will alter the distribution of ecosystems around the world and change the flow of these benefits. The implications of ecosystem changes for human welfare depend on both the nature of these changes and the extent to which communities rely on natural systems for their well-being. We present recent research and discuss the impacts of climate change on biodiversity\, including the role for the economy\, in the light also of the latest review by the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services and the Dasgupta Independent Review on the Economics of Biodiversity. \n  \nRegister in advance to participate.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-prisma-webinar/
LOCATION:On line
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231114
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231117
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230510T174948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230908T104025Z
UID:10007-1699920000-1700179199@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:16th IAMC Annual Meeting
DESCRIPTION:The Sixteenth IAMC Annual Meeting will take place on November 14th – 16th\, 2023 at Hilton Molino Stucky\, Venice\, Italy. \nThe event will take place 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.\nTwo kinds of poster sessions are planned: fully online and fully in person. Presenters in fully in-person sessions can present their posters also at the fully online sessions if they wish so. In-person sessions will be organised following local time zone (CET). The IAMC will take steps to mitigate the inconvenience this may create for participants residing in regions with different time zones\, for example by making session recordings immediately available to participants for a certain period of time. \nAnnual Meeting Purpose\nThe purpose of IAMC Annual Meetings is to: \n\npresent and discuss the state of the art in integrated assessment modeling;\nreview the status of ongoing community activities including both multi-model studies and the activities of the IAMC Scientific Working Groups;\nfacilitate interaction with collaborating communities;\nevaluate and revisit the priorities of the integrated assessment community.\n\nThe IAMC Annual Meeting is a scientific meeting intended for peer sharing and vetting. The meeting is open to all registered participants. Researchers from organisations involved in integrated assessment modelling and their research collaborators are warmly encouraged to attend. The meeting is designed to allow researchers to share developments in methods\, models and data. Participants are expected to be able to freely discuss their work. \nCall for abstracts\nThe IAMC solicits abstracts for oral and poster presentations. \nThe deadline for abstracts submissions is July 7th\, 2023. \nRegistrations\nRegistrations will open in September 2023 and will close on November 25th\, 2023. Detailed information on the registration fee scheme is available here. \nInformation\nFor any questions\, please contact the IAMC Secretariat at the Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC): iamc@iamconsortium.org. \n  \nMore info on the website: https://www.iamconsortium.org/
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/16th-iamc-annual-meeting/
LOCATION:Venice\, Italy
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231017
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231019
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20231016T110429Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231016T112818Z
UID:10367-1697500800-1697673599@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:UPTAKE Kick-Off Meeting
DESCRIPTION:The UPTAKE Kick-off meeting will be held in Milan (hosted by the RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment) from the 17th to the 18th of October\, 2023. \nThe research project is a Horizon Europe funded project and coordinated by the Foundation CMCC – Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici and will last 48 months from September 1st 2023 to October 31st 2027. \nUPTAKE aims to develop resilient CDR strategies based on strengthened scientific evidence on the social\, technological\, economic\, and environmental characteristics of CDR technologies and their interplay. The scientific evidence will be collated into a CDR knowledge inventory\, openly accessible to the science\, policy\, business communities. Together with improved CDR modules in climate-energy models\, a CDR roadmap explorer will be developed to help identify resilient and implementable CDR portfolios which enable net-zero strategies. \nIt will be an occasion to discuss Work Packages\, present future actions\, and set up the upcoming milestones\, with the aim of creating synergies and cross-collaboration. \n  \n*Closed to the general public.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/uptake-kick-off-meeting/
LOCATION:Via Bergognone 34\, 20144 Milan c/o Cariplo Factory
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231005
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231007
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230526T174252Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230929T141227Z
UID:10106-1696464000-1696636799@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:The European Climate and Energy Modelling Platform 2023
DESCRIPTION:The 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 2023 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. This year\, the overarching topic is: “Net Zero\, intermediate targets\, and sectoral decarbonization facing geopolitical and macroeconomic challenges”. Visit ECEMP website here for the programme. \nThe conference will be held on Zoom (registration mandatory for each day): \nDay 1 | Mid-term targets towards Net Zero and sectoral challenges\nRegister here for day 1 \nDay 2 | Macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges and the Net Zero transition\nRegister here for day 2
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/the-european-climate-and-energy-modelling-platform-2023/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230928
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230930
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230908T093253Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230908T093253Z
UID:10302-1695859200-1696031999@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF Conference on Solar Geoengineering Futures
DESCRIPTION:Solar Geoengineering Futures: Interdisciplinary Research to Inform Decisionmaking\nAn RFF conference exploring the big questions surrounding solar radiation modification and its potential consequences for climate change. \nSolar geoengineering represents a set of risky and untested—yet potentially beneficial—technologies that could help address the growing risks of climate change\, especially when paired with aggressive emissions mitigation\, carbon dioxide removal\, and climate resilience efforts. While interest has been growing in solar geoengineering\, more physical climate and social science research is needed before policymakers consider developing deployment capability. Additionally\, ongoing and robust public engagement with a diverse set of global stakeholders and communities is crucial\, especially as the impacts may affect regions differently. \nJoin Resources for the Future (RFF) on September 28 and 29\, for “Solar Geoengineering Futures: Interdisciplinary Research to Inform Decisionmaking”\, a two-day conference focused on the key questions informing ongoing research and decisionmaking on solar geoengineering. This hybrid event will feature an interdisciplinary group of leading solar geoengineering experts exploring the major challenges\, uncertainties\, and potential benefits related to this emerging set of technologies. \nFind here the working papers of the RFF solar geoengineering research team. \n  \nJoin in Person: Click here to register to attend the event in person. \nJoin Virtually: To attend this event virtually\, please RSVP and follow the instructions in the Zoom confirmation email. \nMore information here. \n  \nAgenda\nThursday\, September 28\, 2023\n10:00 a.m. | Coffee \n  \n10:30 a.m. | Welcome and Introduction\nIntroductions by Richard Newell and Billy Pizer \n  \n10:45 a.m. | Panel 1. Biophysical impacts: Climatic & non-climatic risks and benefits.\nThe starting point for social science research on solar geoengineering (SG) is the biophysical parameters of a possible SG intervention. This session will provide a grounding in SG knowns and unknowns\, as well as ongoing research in this area.\nModerator: Peter Irvine\nPanelists: John Moore\, Daniele Visioni\, Lili Xia\, and Babatunde Joseph Abiodun \n  \n12:00 p.m. | Lunch\nLunch Discussion: A conversation with a member of the Climate Overshoot Commission\, moderated by Jonathan Wiener \n  \n1:30 p.m. | Panel 2. Would solar geoengineering crowd out emissions cuts? The “moral hazard” risk examined\nA key concern about solar geoengineering research is the notion of “moral hazard” risk\, where any movement to consider SG weakens the motivation to pursue mitigation. This session will examine latest social science research on SG moral hazard risk.\nModerator: Joe Aldy\nPanelists: Talbott Andrews\, Dave McEvoy\, Christine Merk\, and David Morrow \n  \n2:45 p.m. | Coffee Break \n  \n3:05 p.m. | Panel 3. Solar geoengineering’s place within the broader climate strategy portfolio\nIf solar geoengineering is deployed\, it will likely occur alongside other key climate strategies\, such as emission mitigation\, CO2 removal\, and adaptation. The aim of this session is to describe the role of SG under different development of mitigation and adaptation policies\, assuming countries cooperate to fight climate change.\nModerator: Massimo Tavoni\nPanelists: Mariia Belaia\, Tony Harding\, Doug MacMartin\, and Simone Tilmes \n  \n4:20 p.m. | Day 1 Closing Remarks \n  \nFriday\, September 29\, 2023\n9:00 a.m. | Panel 4. Plausible non-optimal near-term solar geoengineering scenarios\nSeveral decades of experience with global coordination and cooperation around climate mitigation suggests that solar geoengineering might emerge in a non-optimal manner. This session will examine how this might happen\, what it might mean\, and what actions might be warranted in the near term.\nModerator: Tyler Felgenhauer\nPanelists: Beth Chalecki\, Joshua Horton\, Jessica Seddon\, and Erin Sikorsky \n  \n10:15 a.m. | Coffee Break \n  \n10:35 a.m. | Panel 5. Capacity building for competent\, just\, and inclusive decision-making\nAs momentum around research and governance discussions is growing\, questions arise around how we should make decisions around both research and potential deployment of solar geoengineering\, and who is part of a decision-making process. This panel will examine key steps to enabling and building meaningful engagement in this space.\nModerator: Shuchi Talati\nPanelists: Julie Arrighi\, Marion Hourdequin\, Hassaan Sipra\, and Billy Williams \n  \n12:00 p.m. | Lunch\nLunch Discussion: US Federal Government research on solar geoengineering. \n  \n1:30 p.m. | Panel 6. Important next steps for policy and research: A solar geoengineering research agenda for the next decade\nIn this final panel\, we hope to bring together themes from the previous session in a discussion of funding and policy possibilities and priorities.\nModerator: Shannon Osaka\nPanelists: Holly Buck\, David Keith\, Andy Parker\, and Ted Parson \n  \n2:45 p.m. | Closing Remarks
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-conference-on-solar-geoengineering-futures/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230713T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230713T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230411T101031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230724T101935Z
UID:9865-1689260400-1689264000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF-CMCC-NAVIGATE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:THE CLIMATE TRANSITION IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE:\nINSIGHTS FROM NATIONAL AND GLOBAL IAMS AND REGIONAL DOWNSCALING\nModerator: \nJohannes Emmerling\, RFF‐CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, Italy \nSpeakers: \nMaciej Bukowski\, WiseEuropa Institute\, Poland\nFabio Sferra\, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)\, Austria\nEvelina Trutnevyte\, University of Geneva\, Switzerland \nAgenda: \n\nIntroduction by Johannes Emmerling\nDownscaling regional IAMs results to the country level – a new algorithm\nSpeakers: Maciej Bukowski\, WiseEuropa Institute\, Poland; Fabio Sferra\, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)\, Austria\nAbstract: The IPCC AR6 states that under current NDCs (nationally determined contributions) global warming will likely exceed 1.5C during this century. Applying insights from this report on how to decarbonize national economies\, has remained difficult as Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) focus on a global scale or large economic aggregates\, while emissions targets are nationally determined. This paper presents a new tool aiming at downscaling regional IAMs results to the country level\, to provide guidance on how to enhance NDCs and mid-century strategies in line with the long-term goal of the Paris Agreement\, based on best available science. We apply this tool to the latest NGFS 2022 results and show a range of pathways at the country level compatible with the 1.5C target.\nLow-carbon electricity sector in Europe risks sustaining regional inequalities in benefits and vulnerabilities\nSpeaker: Evelina Trutnevyte\, University of Geneva\, Switzerland\nAbstract: Using spatially-explicit electricity sector modeling for 296 sub-national regions in Europe\, we show that emission cuts consistent with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in 2050 result in continent-wide benefits by 2035 regarding electricity sector investments\, employment gains\, and decreased greenhouse gas and particulate matter emissions. However\, benefits risk being concentrated in affluent regions of Northern Europe\, while regions of Southern and Southeastern Europe risk high vulnerabilities due to higher adverse impacts and lower adaptive capacities.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-navigate-webinar-3/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230711T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230711T150000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230629T100623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230711T080637Z
UID:10219-1689084000-1689087600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF-CMCC EIEE Webinar-Seminar
DESCRIPTION:TEMPERATURE-RELATED ENERGY INSECURITY AND PREPAYMENT FOR ENERGY IN REMOTE AUSTRALIA\nSpeaker: Thomas Longden (Urban Transformations Research Centre\, Western Sydney University) \nModerator: Luis Alejandro Sarmiento (CMCC Foundation\, RFF – CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment) \nAbstract: Indigenous communities in remote Australia face dangerous temperature extremes. These extremes are associated with increased risk of mortality and ill health. For many households\, temperature extremes increase both their reliance on those services that energy provides\, and the risk of those services being disconnected. Poor quality housing\, low incomes\, poor health and energy insecurity associated with prepayment all exacerbate the risk of temperature-related harm. Here we use daily smart meter data for 3\,300 households and regression analysis to assess the relationship between temperature\, electricity use and disconnection in 28 remote communities. We find that nearly all households (91%) experienced a disconnection from electricity during the 2018–2019 financial year. Almost three quarters of households (74%) were disconnected more than ten times. Households with high electricity use located in the central climate zones had a one in three chance of a same-day disconnection on very hot or very cold days. A broad suite of interrelated policy responses is required to reduce the frequency\, duration and negative effects of disconnection from electricity for remote-living Indigenous residents. The risks associated with the regular de-energization of prepay households have long been overlooked by government reporting and this contributed to a lack of visibility of energy insecurity and available protections for this group during the pandemic response. In contrast to the rest of Australia\, energy insecurity in the form of disconnections remained unrelentingly high or worsened for prepay households during this time. \n  \nRegistration required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN__QXEPkBWTQm1vYDW-U6_VA \n  \nPhoto courtesy of Original Power
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-eiee-webinar-seminar/
LOCATION:Milan
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230703
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230708
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20221130T111043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230710T135516Z
UID:9649-1688342400-1688774399@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:Summer School on Integrated Assessment Models
DESCRIPTION:Summer School on Integrated Assessment Models\nAs climate policymaking becomes increasingly informed by model simulations\, it becomes crucial for researchers to better understand how climate-energy-economy models work\, how they are used\, and how to inform policymaking through their output. The NAVIGATE and ENGAGE projects\, funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme\, are therefore launching a Summer School aimed at providing advanced training for young international scholars\, advanced PhD students and early postdoc fellows\, working on integrated assessment models. \nThe Summer School will be organized by CMCC Foundation\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) and will take place at Lake Como\, Villa del Grumello\, from 3rd to 7th July 2023. \nObjectives\nThe objective of the summer school is to create a community of young scholars from a broad range of disciplines (climate\, ecology\, economy\, energy\, political science) actively working on modelling human activities and the earth system in an integrated framework commonly referred to as Integrated Assessment Modeling. \nStructure of the week\n\n8 lectures about IAMs\, including an introductory presentation on IAMs and their role as input to global stock stake and policy analysis.\nInteractive poster sessions where the student will be invited to present their work.\nHands-on session on the IAMs scenarios (data analysis and visualization).\nGroup work on model development/analysis.\n\nOn Monday 3rd July\, a welcome reception/dinner will be offered at 19:30. A social dinner will also be organized during the week (on Thursday 6th July). \nLecture topics\n\nOpening lecture on IAM history and role in Climate Negotiation\nMacroeconomics\nEnergy Systems\nModelling SDGs\nSocial Sciences\nUncertainty\nScenarios retrieval\, analysis\, and visualization\n\n  \nFaculty\n\nDr. Nico BAUER\, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)\nDr. Valentina BOSETTI\, Bocconi University and RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\nDr. Celine GUIVARCH\, International Center for Development and Environment (CIRED)\nDr. Daniel HUPPMANN\, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)\nDr. Keywan RIAHI\, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)\nDr. Roberto SCHAEFFER\, Centre for Energy and Environmental Economics (Cenergia)\, COPPE/UFRJ\nDr. Massimo TAVONI\, Polytechnic University of Milan and RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, CMCC\nDr. Kaj-Ivar VAN DER WIJST\, Utrecht University\nDr. Saritha Sudharmma VISHWANATHAN\, Indian Institute of Management (IIM)\nDr. Zoi VRONTISI\, E3 Modelling (E3M)\nDr. Detlef Van VUUREN\, PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency (PBL) and Utrecht University\n\nLocal Organizers\n\nLaurent DROUET (ENGAGE) RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\nJohannes EMMERLING (NAVIGATE)  RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\n\nTarget audience\nAdvanced doctoral students (e.g.\, from 2nd year onwards) and early career scientists (e.g.\, early post-docs) from any university\, research institute\, or other organization (private companies\, government agencies\, NGOs) whose research is focused on using computational methods to study environmental and climate related issues (for instance\, energy system models\, climate models\, ecological models\, epidemiological models\, macroeconomic models). \nRequirement: good programming knowledge in at least one of these languages: Python\, GAMS\, Julia\, R\, Matlab\, C++. \n  \nNumber of students\nParticipation will be open to a maximum of 25 individuals (Both EU and non-EU participants). \n  \nHow to apply?\nApplicants are kindly requested to fill in the application form available from here and send – immediately after – to the Summer School Secretariat (iam-summer-school@eiee.org) a single PDF file containing the following documents: \n\nCurriculum Vitae\nLetter of motivation for joining the summer school (max. 1 page)\nA letter of reference from his/her supervisor (with original signature)\nThe draft of the paper the researcher will present (no length constraint).\n\nCosts\nTransportation to and from the summer school venue\, non-event dinners\, and local transportation will be at the expense of the participant. All covered costs include: accommodation\, lunches\, coffee breaks\, the welcome reception/dinner (on Monday) and one social dinner (on Thursday) are provided without charge for all participants of the school. \nScholarships\nUp to 5 scholarships are available to applicants from low and lower income countries (World bank classification). The scholarships will cover travel expenses. \nImportant dates\nApplication deadline: 1st March 2023 \nAnnouncement of accepted applicants: 15th April 2023 \nUpon acceptance\, participants will be required to confirm their participations: 30th April 2023 \nSummer school dates: 3rd to 7th July 2023 \n  \nDownload here the pdf of the Summer School on Integrated Assessment Models
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/navigate-engage-summer-school-on-integrated-assessment-models-call-fo-applications/
LOCATION:Villa del Grumello (Como\, Italy)
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230701
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230510T185355Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230628T143730Z
UID:10026-1687824000-1688169599@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:28th Annual Conference of the EAERE
DESCRIPTION:EIEE supports the 28th Annual Conference of the European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE) which will take place from 27 to 30 June 2023 in Limassol\, Cyprus. \nThe conference will take place in person in the coastal city of Limassol\, one of the 100 European cities to receive EU support in achieving the goal of Climate-Neutral and Smart Cities by 2030. In addition\, the conference will include some hybrid events as part of the programme. \nThe conference is organised by The Cyprus Institute\, the Cyprus University of Technology and the Department of Economics of the University of Cyprus. \n  \nHIGHLIGHTS\n  \nJune 29\, 2023\nEAERE Award for ERC Grants laureates | More info here\nAwards Announcements | 10:00-10:30 am EEST Cyprus\, UCT+3 \nPresentations by ERC grantees | 11:15am – 01:00pm EEST Cyprus\, UCT+3 \n2023 Awardees: \n\nMathias Reynaert; \nTobias Berg;\nMassimo Tavoni;\nBard Harstad.\n\n  \nJune 29\, 2023 | 14:30-16:15 EEST Cyprus\, UCT+3\nAdJUST Policy session | More info here\nPolicies to Enable Just Transitions: Building a Bridge between Research and Practice \nThis session will enable a deeper understanding of the challenges and drivers of the design and implementation of effective\, politically feasible\, and equitable decarbonization policies in the context of the energy and digital transition. It is organized as a roundtable dialogue among practitioners representing a wide set of stakeholders and academics from a wide variety of research backgrounds and methodological approaches. The chair of the session will provide guiding questions\, with the aim of highlighting recent events and policy developments – particularly the COVID19 pandemic\, the recent energy crisis\, the Just Transition Fund and Just Transition Mechanisms within the broader context of the European Green Deal – the latest relevant research results\, and fruitful avenues of research co-design among Just Transition experts. \nPanelists: \n\nMassimo Tavoni (CMCC Foundation\, RFF – CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment)\nIoana Petrescu (Pur si Simplu Verde)\nJan Steckel (Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change)\nKarin Küblböck (Austrian Foundation for Development Research)\nMarion Dumas (London School of Economics)
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/28th-annual-conference-of-the-eaere/
LOCATION:Limassol\, Cyprus
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230620T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230620T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230526T150829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230721T133442Z
UID:10096-1687273200-1687276800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF-CMCC-NAVIGATE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:THE ENERGY TRANSITION IN EUROPE: INSIGHTS FROM INTEGRATED ASSESSMENT MODELS AND SOCIO-TECHNICAL ENERGY TRANSITION (STET) MODELLING\nSpeakers:\nMarc Jaxa-Rozen\, University of Geneva\, Switzerland\nRachel Freeman\, UCL Energy Institute\, UK \nModerator: \nEvelina Trutnevyte\, University of Geneva\, Switzerland \nAgenda: \n\nIntroduction by Evelina Trutnevyte\nElectricity market governance and the historical performance of electricity transitions in European countries: insights from retrospective modeling\n\nSpeaker: Marc Jaxa-Rozen\nAbstract: The last decades have seen several shifts in governance paradigms for European national electricity systems between market liberalization and policy interventions. However\, there remains a lack of consistent evidence about impacts of electricity market governance on the performance of electricity systems. This work uses retrospective bottom-up modeling to assess links between electricity market governance in 31 European countries and their electricity system transitions during 1990-2019. We identify historical governance regimes based on indicators of market regulation\, renewable electricity policy support\, and combined regulation and policy support. To measure performance of electricity systems\, we quantify deviations between modeled historical and least-cost pathways using net present costs per unit of supplied electricity\, emissions intensity\, transformation of generation mix\, and share of new renewable technologies. Countries with earlier liberalization of electricity markets on average had higher unit net present costs\, lower emissions intensity\, and higher share of new renewable generation relative to modeled least-cost pathways. We find that European countries combining early liberalization with high support for renewable generation had the highest average historical share of renewable generation relative to least-cost pathways. Countries combining late liberalization with high support for renewable generation\, which includes countries with a higher level of public ownership of incumbent low-carbon generation\, had the lowest relative values for unit net present costs and emissions intensity. \n\n Socio-technical modelling of UK energy transition under three global SSPs\, with recommendations for contributing to IAMs\n\nSpeaker: Rachel Freeman\nAbstract: The potential for using findings from socio-technical energy transition (STET) models in Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) has been proposed by several authors. A STET simulation model called TEMPEST\, which includes the influence of societal and political factors in the UK’s energy transition\, is used to model three of the global shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) at the national level. The SSP narratives are interpreted as inputs to TEMPEST\, which drive scenario simulations to reflect varying societal preferences for mitigation measures\, the level of political support for energy transition\, and future economic and population trends. SSP1 and SSP2 come close to meeting UK net zero targets in 2050 but SSP5 does not reach net zero before 2080. Three key TEMPEST findings are recommended for use in IAMs: (i) the uncertainty in emissions savings due to variability in political and societal support for energy transition\, (ii) the influence of negative societal pushback to policies in achievement of expected policy outcomes\, and (iii) the combined influence on energy service demand of disposable income\, public willingness to participate\, and user impacts from measures. This talk will focus on the recommendations for using TEMPEST results in IAMs and discuss possibilities for next steps. \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-navigate-webinar-4/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230614T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230614T140000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230524T143300Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230919T095530Z
UID:10061-1686735000-1686751200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:Conference: INHALE final meeting
DESCRIPTION:Agricoltura e qualità dell’aria: dai dati alle decisioni\nOn June 14\, 2023\, join us to hear about four Cariplo Foundation-funded projects and discuss the impacts of air pollution on the agricultural sector. \nThe conference “Agricoltura e qualità dell’aria: dai dati alle decisioni” will be in Italian and organized by CMCC\, Legambiente and Bocconi University. \nINHALE will be presented during the event. \nIt will be both online and in presence\, through prior registration. \nAgenda\n9:30-9:40 | Saluti istituzionali \nBenedetta Terragni e Matteo Barbato\, Fondazione Cariplo \n9:40-10:00 | Il progetto AgriAir \nMarialuisa Volta\, Università degli Studi di Brescia \n10:00-10:20 | Il progetto INHALE \nLara Aleluia Reis\, CMCC/Bocconi \n10:20 – 10:40 | Il progetto Agrimonia \nMichela Cameletti\, Università degli Studi di Bergamo \n10:40 – 11:00 | Il progetto D-DUST \nDaniele Oxoli\, Politecnico di Milano \n11:00-11:15 | Pausa caffè \n11:15-11:30 | EU Commission’s Proposal to mitigate emissions from cattle\, pigs and poultry as part of the revised Industrial Emissions Directive (English) \nMichael Bennett EC DG Environment \n11:30-11:45 | Un modello sostenibile e a basse emissioni per il distretto agricolo e zootecnico \nMaria Vincenza Chiriacò\, CMCC \n11:45-12:00 | Qualità dell’aria nel bacino padano: il contributo del progetto Prepair \nGuido Lanzani\, ARPA Lombardia \n12:00-13:00 | Tavola rotonda con enti e istituzioni del settore: appunti per una strategia sostenibile \nValeria Sonvico\, Coldiretti Lombardia; Giacomo Pirlo\, CREA; Marco Paravicini\, FederBio; Matteo Lazzarini\, Regione Lombardia\, Direzione Generale Ambiente e Clima; Damiano Di Simine\, Legambiente Lombardia \nModeratore: Luca Carra\, Scienza in Rete \n13:00-14:00 | Pranzo leggero \nDownload here the presentations of the day.  \n \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/conference-inhale-final-meeting/
LOCATION:Via Bergognone 34\, 20144 Milan c/o Cariplo Factory
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230613
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230616
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230510T181954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230510T184009Z
UID:10017-1686614400-1686873599@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:International Energy Workshop 2023
DESCRIPTION:Registration is now open!\nThe 41st edition of the International Energy Workshop (IEW) will be co-hosted by the Colorado School of Mines and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory\, in Golden\, CO\, US\, on 13-15 June\, 2023. \nRegister here. \nIEW website: https://www.internationalenergyworkshop.org/. \nDownload here the IEW brochure.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/2023-international-energy-workshop/
LOCATION:Golden\, CO\, USA
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230524
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230526
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230510T205542Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230510T205542Z
UID:10032-1684886400-1685059199@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:Conference on Decision-making under uncertainty in climate and macroeconomics
DESCRIPTION:The “Conference on Decision-Making Under Uncertainty in Climate and Macroeconomics” is a small and colloquial two-day workshop to discuss the latest advancements in theory and applications of decision-making under uncertainty with the goal of advancing policy solutions for the climate and the economy. We envision four sessions each with plenary speakers along with more focused perspectives and research contributions from additional scholars. The talks will provide an inroad for participants interested in the climate sciences\, economic implications\, and uncertainty from a variety of different vantage points. We aim for this event to nurture cross-disciplinary communication on important challenges related to climate change. The conference is organized by MFR-Chicago\, Bocconi\, and the RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment. \nObjectives: A small and colloquial two-day workshop to discuss the latest advancements in theory and applications of decision-making under uncertainty with the goal of fostering a dialogue between climate and economic sciences and advancing climate policy solutions. \nFormat: The conference will be two days long\, with one day centered on climate and the second day focused on macro-economics. On each day\, there will be two sessions of roughly 3 hours each. One hour of introduction by two speakers describing the problem and the current knowledge. One hour of responses by discussants. One hour of brainstorming between experts from different disciplines. \n  \nFind the Agenda here.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/conference-on-decision-making-under-uncertainty-in-climate-and-macroeconomics/
LOCATION:Milan
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230517T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230517T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230411T083557Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230724T102133Z
UID:9867-1684335600-1684339200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF – CMCC – EDITS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:IMPLICATIONS OF ENERGY SUFFICIENCY ON ELECTRICITY DEMAND AND SYSTEM COSTS: A QUANTIFIED ASSESSMENT \nSpeaker: Bianka Shoai-Tehrani\, RTE – Pôle Stratégie\, Prospective et Evaluation – Direction Economie du Système Electrique – Pôle Etudes Economiques et Environnementales \nModerator: Benigna Boza-Kiss\, IIASA \nAbstract: While an increasing number of countries adopt a carbon neutrality target\, the search for emission cutting solutions tends to shift from low-carbon energy technologies towards demand-side transformations\, including low-energy demand lifestyles. Such lifestyles can include both energy efficiency and energy sufficiency measures. While energy efficiency revolves around technology-based solutions to cut consumption and thus emissions – though not always effective due to rebound effect – sufficiency consists in reducing one’s own demand as a choice. Such a transformation thus has the potential to reduce energy demand with economic benefits as it could allow avoiding some of the low-carbon investments needed to achieve carbon neutrality. However\, as it is rooted in socio-behavioral considerations\, it is difficult to quantify the potential for the reduction in energy consumption that would result from the adoption of an energy sufficient lifestyle. In light of these issues\, this paper aims at identifying plausible changes in electricity consumption behaviors in France linked with a sufficient lifestyle\, and quantifying the associated energy consumption reduction and economic benefits on the road to carbon neutrality by 2050. \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-edits-webinar-2/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230511T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230511T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230421T100308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230724T102242Z
UID:9933-1683817200-1683820800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF-CMCC-AdJUST and CAPABLE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:THE IMPACT OF GREEN POLICIES ON LOCAL ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE: EVIDENCE FROM THE EU ETS\nSpeaker: Ireri Hernandez Carballo\, Bocconi University and RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, CMCC \nModerator: Cristina Cattaneo\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, CMCC \nAbstract: Environmental policies such as the European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) raise concerns about their impact on employment and competitiveness. Yet\, exist- ing EU ETS studies focus on firm-level outcomes and the initial phases of the program. We construct a panel dataset of about 15\,000 European NUTS3 level provinces between 2005 and 2019 to assess the impact of the EU ETS\, and in particular on its Phase III\, on the local economic performance\, namely gross value added (GVA)\, employment\, and productivity per employee (PPE) of European provinces. We employ data on emissions covered by the EU ETS to construct a continuous measure of local level exposure. Using a continuous difference-in-differences fixed effects framework\, we find that that being more exposed to the EU ETS is associated with negative and significant results on employment and significant increases in productivity\, starting from Phase II. These results are confirmed both at the sector and general NUTS3 level\, suggesting that local economies have generally been able to increase their productivity as an answer to the constraints posed by the EU ETS system. \nPaper’s Authors: Gian Maria Mallarino\, Bocconi University and OECD\, and Ireri Hernandez Carballo\, Bocconi University and RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, CMCC
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-adjust-webinar/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230508T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230508T150000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230411T081842Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T102225Z
UID:9861-1683554400-1683558000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF-CMCC-LOCALISED Webinar
DESCRIPTION:UNDERSTANDING ITALY’S STAGNATION \nSpeaker: Max Krahe\, Institute for Socioeconomics\, University of Duisburg-Essen\, Dezernat Zukunft – Institute for Macro-finance \nModerator: Severin Reissl\, RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE)\, Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici (CMCC) \nAbstract: Italy’s economic stagnation is a matter of fiscal\, national\, and European concern. Since a good remedy requires an accurate diagnosis\, this paper summarises\, compares\, and evaluates the main explanations for this stagnation. After describing Italy’s recent economic record\, the paper reviews three families of explanations: “unwillingness to reform” accounts\, monetary integration accounts\, and accounts that prioritise the firm-level perspective. Concluding that\, taken by themselves\, none of them provide a fully convincing account\, a synthesis of their most promising elements follows. While the paper does not develop proposals for a new reform mix\, its diagnosis implies that any credible reform package must tackle the deep roots of Italy’s stagnation\, without repeating the investment-suppressing mistakes of the last 30 years. In light of this\, positive conditionality – i.e. conditions that unlock additional resources\, as with NextGenEU – with a focus on companies\, institutions\, and investment\, may be a promising way forward. \n  \nRegistration required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZYsfumgrTItH9Z-R6hrUa1qfuO3fGDHsDoP \nRegister in advance for this meeting: you will receive a confirmation email containing more information.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-eiee-webinar-2/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230419T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230419T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230411T080730Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230421T101215Z
UID:9859-1681916400-1681920000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:SWEEEP Webinar
DESCRIPTION:SWEEEP Webinar Series hosted by ETH\nSpeaker: MEETA KESWANI MEHRA\, Centre for International Trade and Development \nTitle: Welfare Effects of Catastrophic Climate Events on Mountain Communities: A Case Study of the Uttarakhand Flash \n  \nRegistration required: https://ethz.zoom.us/meeting/register/u50odOmqrTojHNI2dcegc1_fJcubvWYacH7l \nRegister in advance for this meeting: you will receive a confirmation email containing more information.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/sweeep-webinar-3/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230330T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230330T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230327T060020Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240731T130227Z
UID:9791-1680188400-1680192000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EDITS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Demand-side opportunities to address recent crises: recent findings from the buildings sector\nSpeakers: SOURAN CHATTERJEE\, University of Plymouth\, and DIANA URGE-VORSATZ\, Central European University \nModerator: ELENA VERDOLINI\, University of Brescia and RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment (EIEE) \nAbstract: Disruptions and crises pose major hardship for humanity\, the provisioning systems\, and the ecosystem. At the same time\, these non-linear events also provide unique opportunities for accelerating the energy transition\, while addressing the challenges of the crises themselves. Yet\, it has been shown that very little of the opportunities to restructure the energy demand system due to the pandemic have been taken advantage of. Similarly\, the discourse on response measures to recent crises (COVID-19\, energy security problems in Europe\, civil disorder\, energy market and price volatilities\, cost of living shocks\, etc.) miss or at least under-emphasize key potentials to rethink how societal longer-term goals of universal wellbeing within the planetary boundaries could be reached. \nThe presentation will highlight the key opportunities through which crisis response strategies can mitigate the impacts of current and future crises while accelerating our progress towards climate mitigation targets through demand-side measures. With a stronger focus on the demand-side (and distributed renewables) related measures\, harnessing and piggy-backing on changes brought by these crises (e.g.\, energy price hikes\, pop-up infrastructure)\, policies can achieve a broader spectrum of benefits (e.g.\, jobs\, health\, pollution reduction\, energy security\, equity). Focusing particularly on the buildings sector will allow to mitigate the burden of these disruptions on households and economies in a better way than many of the currently popular supply-side response measures. In particular\, demand-side measures are also ideally fit to combat the acute energy price crisis and ensuing inflation\, making them key for creating just energy transitions. \n  \nThe webinar is organized in the framework of the Energy Demand changes Induced by Technological and Social innovations (EDITS) project\, which is coordinated by the Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth (RITE) and International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)\, and funded by Ministry of Economy\, Trade\, and Industry (METI)\, Japan. \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-edits-webinar/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230315T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230315T123000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230206T081509Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230206T081509Z
UID:9714-1678879800-1678883400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC@Ca'Foscari Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Reducing the Unequal Access to Cooling Energy: Evidence from the Residential Electricity Market in India\nSpeaker: Filippo PAVANELLO \nAbstract: As temperatures and income increase\, household will rely more on air-conditioning to maintain thermal comfort in their dwellings. However\, the access to residential cooling energy is highly unequal\, and air-conditioning remain a luxury good in most developing countries. As heat stress harms human well-being\, identifying cooling adaptation inequalities and adequate policies is critical to protect the most vulnerable. This work thoroughly studies the cooling inequality problem in India\, one of the main emerging economies\, where the need for space cooling technologies is prominent. First\, we provide evidence on the inequality in the access and use of residential cooling energy through an in-depth analysis of the intensive and extensive margin responses of Indian households. We then use our estimates to project how the cooling inequality would develop in the future without government interventions. We show that future increasing incomes are not sufficient to reduce the cooling gaps\, and urgent action and investment would be necessary to protect people most at risk from extreme heat. Finally\, exploiting household-level information on the purchasing cost of cooling appliances\, we find that subsiding more than half of the purchasing cost would highly reduce the cooling gap even in the low-income households\, and the benefits of using the technology would be greater than its operational cost for the new adopters. \nTo attend in presence: \nMeeting Room\, CMCC@Ca’Foscari offices\, Porta Dell’Innovazione building\, VEGA Park\, Second floor\nPlease notice that we have a limited number of seats available. If you are interested in attending in presence\, please send an email to elena.niero@cmcc.it.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcccafoscari-seminar-3/
LOCATION:Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230217T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230217T123000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230202T113345Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230202T113345Z
UID:9703-1676633400-1676637000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CMCC@Ca'Foscari Seminar
DESCRIPTION:The Impact of Air-conditioning on Residential Electricity Consumption across World Countries\nSpeakers: Filippo PAVANELLO\, Giacomo FALCHETTA \nAbstract: This paper provides the first global assessment of the energy implications of households’ climate change adaptation through air-conditioning. We pool household survey data from 25 countries and employ a discrete-continuous choice econometric framework to simultaneously estimate the adoption and utilisation of air-conditioning. After identifying how individual drivers determine households’ adaptation behaviours\, we combine the estimated responses with socioeconomic\, demographic\, and\, climate change scenarios available at a high spatial resolution to project future air-conditioning adoption and electricity demand\, as well as the contribution of individual determinants. On average\, air-conditioning ownership increases households’ electricity consumption by 37%\, but the effect is highly heterogeneous\, and it varies with weather conditions\, income levels and across countries\, revealing the importance of behaviors\, practices\, climate\, and technologies. Compared to other socioeconomic\, demographic\, and climatic drivers of electricity demand\, air-conditioning has the leading marginal effect\, and it can account for a significant share of households’ budget. We then show that\, especially in developing and emerging countries\, age\, education\, and urbanisation reinforce the positive\, long-term effect of income and high temperatures on air-conditioning adoption and electricity demand for space cooling. The overall effect of socio-demographic\, economic\, and climatic drivers is a net increase in regional and global air-conditioning electricity by 2050. Electricity expenditure for air-conditioning is an important benchmark for tracking a new dimension of energy poverty related to the need of space cooling and our projections points at a new\, emerging risk associated with this form of households’ adaptation. \nTo attend in presence: \nMeeting Room\, CMCC@Ca’Foscari offices\, Porta Dell’Innovazione building\, VEGA Park\, Second floor\nPlease notice that we have a limited number of seats available. If you are interested in attending in presence\, please send an email to elena.niero@cmcc.it.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/cmcccafoscari-seminar-2/
LOCATION:Ca’ Foscari Challenge School\, VEGA
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230202T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230202T150000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20230116T090659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230724T123913Z
UID:9693-1675346400-1675350000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF - CMCC EIEE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Responsible modelling \nSpeaker: Andrea Saltelli \nAbstract: The talk will illustrate elements of sensitivity analysis\, sensitivity auditing\, sociology and ethics of quantification in relation to the use of mathematical models. \n  \nSuggested reading\nA. Saltelli\, G. Bammer\, I. Bruno\, et al\, Five ways to ensure that models serve society: a manifesto\, Nature 582 (2020) 482–484. \nMonica Di Fiore\, Marta Kuc‑Czarnecka\, Samuele Lo Piano\, Arnald Puy\, Andrea Saltelli\, 2022\, The Challenge of Quantification: An Interdisciplinary Reading\, Minerva\, published online 21 December 2022. \n 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-eiee-webinar/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230117T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230117T163000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
CREATED:20221201T145814Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221214T085424Z
UID:9659-1673967600-1673973000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:RFF-CMCC-NAVIGATE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:International aviation and shipping in a world below 2°C \nSpeaker: Olivier Dessens\, Senior Research Associate\, Bartlett School Environment\, Energy & Resources\, University College London\nModerator: Eduardo Müller Casseres\, Energy Planning Program\, COPPE\, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro \nAbstract:\nAviation and shipping each account for only about 2 to 3% of the global total greenhouse gas emissions but over the last decades they exhibited the fastest growing sources of emissions. This is mainly due to record growth in demand driven by increasing passenger number and freight volume.\nMoreover\, international shipping and aviation were excluded from the Paris Agreement’s national accounting. Instead\, responsibility for dealing with the sectors emissions has been delegated to specialist UN agency – the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) and the International Maritime Organisation (IMO).\nThe ICAO has adopted an aspirational goal of ‘Carbon Neutral Growth from 2020’ for international aviation\, this is to be achieved through a basket of measures\, including the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA). The IMO has adopted an agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from ships by at least 50% by 2050 compared to 2008 levels. However\, the role of both sectors in a world of deep decarbonisation is still relatively unclear.\nWe first discuss available policies and technologies for reducing the emissions of international transport (technological or operational efficiency improvements\, use of alternative fuels\, demand shift and market-based incentives).\nWe then present the results of six global IAMs with different structures and modelling dynamics under the same economic assumptions and carbon budgets focussing on international aviation and shipping emissions. These scenarios have been developed within the NAVIGATE project to achieve below 2oC. The scenarios developed are not considering the respective ICAO and IMO policies and goals as our aim is to compare the modelling results to these targets.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/rff-cmcc-navigate-webinar-2/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221129
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221202
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
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:20260401T164028
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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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221116T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20221116T160000
DTSTAMP:20260401T164028
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:20260401T164028
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:20260401T164028
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:20260401T164028
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:VCALENDAR