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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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DTSTART:20250330T010000
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DTSTART:20260329T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260520T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260520T160000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260313T095604Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260313T095604Z
UID:11755-1779289200-1779292800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:NEWPATHWAYS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:NEWPATHWAYS Webinar\nTitle: Biodiversity side-effects of carbon-focused reforestation under Paris-aligned transition pathways \nAbstract: Large-scale afforestation/reforestation (AR) is often promoted as a cost-effective way to remove carbon from the atmosphere and support Paris-aligned land and energy transformation pathways. Using a dynamic land and energy-system modelling approach\, we find that while stringent climate action that avoids further conversion of forest and non-forest ecosystems offers substantial biodiversity co-benefits by reducing habitat loss\, these benefits are largely offset at high levels of carbon-focused AR (>150 Mha) because of increasing\, disproportionate losses of open\, non-forest habitats. Notably\, the results also show that the scale of AR deployment has little effect on energy-system transformations before 2050 and only limited influence on long-term emissions. These results highlight the varied and species-specific biodiversity consequences of land-system transformations and that rapid near-term emission reductions remain essential for achieving the targets of the Paris agreement. \nPresenter: \n\nPatrick von Jeetze. Patrick currently works as a doctoral researcher in the land use transition lab at PIK. He studied Global Change Ecology (M.Sc) within the Elite Network of Bavaria and holds a Bachelor’s degree in Ecosystem Management (B.Sc.) from the Georg-August-University in Göttingen. His research interests include: Ecosystem services & biodiversity\, Future of food systems\, Soil science and Food security & global change.\n\nModerator: \n\nMiodrag Stevanović is a Senior Scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) in the Land-Use Transition Lab and co-lead of the research Theme Nature within the lab. He holds a PhD in Economics from the Technical University of Berlin\, and a Master’s degree in economics from the Autonomous University of Barcelona. His research focuses on land-use and agricultural system modeling\, climate change impacts on agriculture\, and mitigation options in the sector. A central focus of his current work is the role of nature in agricultural systems and its linkages to broader economic and financial sector.\n\nDiscussant: \n\nJonathan Doelman is a research scientist and project lead of the IMAGE land use team at PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment. He holds a PhD in global environmental change of Utrecht University. He works with the IMAGE integrated assessment model which is regularly applied in global environmental assessment such as IPCC\, IPBES and UNEP’s Global Environmental Outlook. His area of expertise are scenario-based projections of land use in relation to the food system\, climate change mitigation\, biodiversity and other environmental and sustainability topics.\n\nRegister in advance here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/newpathways-webinar-5/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260520T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260520T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260421T120626Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260421T120750Z
UID:12100-1779278400-1779282000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Seminar-Webinar | Climate Intervention with Stratospheric Aerosols: steps towards a more robust assessment
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Daniele Visioni\, Cornell University\nModerator: Pietro Andreoni\, CMCC \nAbstract: Past explosive volcanic eruptions have shown that large SO2 injections in the stratosphere have a temporary cooling effect on our planet temperatures. This has led some to consider whether artificial injections of sulfate (Stratospheric Aerosols Intervention\, SAI) could temporarily ameliorate some of the effects of climate change\, as a supplement to emission reduction. \nNumerous climate models have analyzed the potential impacts of SAI: based on current international multi-model comparisons as part of the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP)\, and large ensembles of simulations we produced with the Community Earth System Model\, I will describe broad areas of agreement but also highlight large inter-model differences and shortcomings from the simulation of the aerosol cloud downstream to regional climate changes\, as well as discuss the problems and some potential solutions with fully mapping the potential space of different SAI applications. \nBuilding on this\, I will share some personal insights about areas where future research should be headed\, as the topic of Climate Intervention gains relevance internationally\, especially drawing on recent discussions held at the Sixth Session of the United Nation Environmental Agency held in February 2024 and through the World Climate Research Programme Lighthouse Activity on Climate Intervention Research. It is clear that the basis for any potential future agreement around this topic can’t just include improved modeling tools and better observational capabilities\, but also a wide range of collaborations across disciplines both in the natural and social realms and a strong commitment to international cooperation. \nThe event will be held online and in presence at CMCC Milan Offices. \nRegister here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-seminar-webinar-climate-intervention-with-stratospheric-aerosols-steps-towards-a-more-robust-assessment/
CATEGORIES:Seminar,Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260520T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260520T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260331T121159Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260401T143121Z
UID:12055-1779278400-1779282000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Seminar-Webinar - Climate Intervention with Stratospheric Aerosols: steps towards a more robust assessment
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Daniele Visioni\, Cornell University\nModerator: Pietro Andreoni\, CMCC \nAbstract: Past explosive volcanic eruptions have shown that large SO2 injections in the stratosphere have a temporary cooling effect on our planet temperatures. This has led some to consider whether artificial injections of sulfate (Stratospheric Aerosols Intervention\, SAI) could temporarily ameliorate some of the effects of climate change\, as a supplement to emission reduction. \nNumerous climate models have analyzed the potential impacts of SAI: based on current international multi-model comparisons as part of the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP)\, and large ensembles of simulations we produced with the Community Earth System Model\, I will describe broad areas of agreement but also highlight large inter-model differences and shortcomings from the simulation of the aerosol cloud downstream to regional climate changes\, as well as discuss the problems and some potential solutions with fully mapping the potential space of different SAI applications. \nBuilding on this\, I will share some personal insights about areas where future research should be headed\, as the topic of Climate Intervention gains relevance internationally\, especially drawing on recent discussions held at the Sixth Session of the United Nation Environmental Agency held in February 2024 and through the World Climate Research Programme Lighthouse Activity on Climate Intervention Research. It is clear that the basis for any potential future agreement around this topic can’t just include improved modeling tools and better observational capabilities\, but also a wide range of collaborations across disciplines both in the natural and social realms and a strong commitment to international cooperation. \nThe event will be held online and in presence at CMCC Milan Offices. \nRegister here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/climate-intervention-with-stratospheric-aerosols-steps-towards-a-more-robust-assessment/
LOCATION:Hybrid
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260519T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260519T120000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260410T154633Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260410T154633Z
UID:12066-1779188400-1779192000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EDITS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Three ways to define consumption corridors and links to wellbeing and inequality\nSpeakers: Vivien Fisch-Romito and Joel Millward-Hopkins\, University of Lausanne \nModerator: Frauke Wiese\, Europa-Universität Flensburg \nAbstract:\nThe idea that everyone should have access to a sufficient\, minimum amount of essential goods and services is uncontroversial\, both in academic and public discourse. It is also clear that avoiding ecological crises requires demand-side changes to consumption\, not just cleaner production. The notion of a minimum ‘floor’ for consumption\, together with constraints placed on total economic activity by environmental limits\, implies an upper ‘ceiling’ to consumption. But the concept of overconsumption remains both controversial and poorly defined. Here we develop three definitions of overconsumption relevant to different scales — individual\, social\, and planetary. These can form overlapping corridors beyond which consumption can be defined as useless\, unfair\, and/or unsustainable\, each of which justifies different political responses. We then describe how all can (and should) be integrated and discuss the implications for understanding and modelling sustainability transitions. To illustrate these possibilities\, we summarise our recent work on energy use in Switzerland. First\, we describe analysis of the potential limits on economic inequality that ‘decent living energy’ requirements imply\, when considering maximum sustainable national energy budgets. Finally\, we show how inequalities in energy use related to transport and housing are influenced by socio-economic\, geographical\, infrastructural\, and behavioral determinants. Energy use is more unequally distributed between individuals than income\, and our results call for policies that go beyond cost-effectiveness to consider age and gender and the targeting of top users.\n\nRegister in advance: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rBm3qpfGQYO1JWBnzs445g#/registration
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/edits-webinar-10/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260513T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260513T150000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260506T094437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260506T094437Z
UID:12112-1778680800-1778684400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:UPTAKE Webinar: CO2LOGIX: A first-order model of pressure-constrained CO2 geological storage growth at the basin scale
DESCRIPTION:The UPTAKE monthly webinar series returns\, continuing its engaging discussions on carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies and the latest research developments. The next session in the series\, dedicated to recent publications on CDR research\, will focus on the paper CO2LOGIX: A first-order model of pressure-constrained CO2 geological storage growth at the basin scale. \nSpeaker: Iain de Jonge-Anderson\, University of Strathclyde\nModerator: Catrin Harris\, Utrecht Univerity\nPanelist: Samuel Krevor\, Imperial College \nLarge-scale geological CO₂ storage faces a critical but underestimated constraint: subsurface pressure buildup from injection can progressively limit storage capacity over time\, yet most climate-policy frameworks\, including IAMs\, still rely on static capacity estimates that ignore this dynamic. The authors introduce CO2LOGIX\, a computationally efficient model that simulates pressure evolution under different CO₂ injection growth scenarios. Applied to a UK case study\, the model shows that unmitigated pressure reaches its upper limit after 83 years\, with near-term storage rates still falling short of recommended targets. Faster growth scenarios worsen the problem\, shrinking available capacity or requiring costly mitigation. The study calls for incorporating realistic pressure feedbacks into IAMs\, and positions CO2LOGIX as a practical tool for managing pressure constraints in large-scale CCS deployment. \nUPTAKE Webinar\n13 May 2026\, h. 14:00 CEST\nTo join the webinar\, register here \n\n\n\nORGANIZED BY: \nThe Industrial & Planetary Carbon Cycle Program at CMCC as part of the UPTAKE project. Coordinated by CMCC\, UPTAKE seeks to support the sustainable expansion of CDR methods by developing reliable strategies through technical\, theoretical\, and practical analysis—plus interactive dialogue within a dedicated stakeholder forum. \nUPTAKE is an EU-funded research project on CDR methods and knowledge coordinated by CMCC Foundation (EIEE Institute). 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/uptake-webinar-co2logix-a-first-order-model-of-pressure-constrained-co2-geological-storage-growth-at-the-basin-scale/
LOCATION:On line
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260512T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260512T160000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260416T125732Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260416T125732Z
UID:12090-1778576400-1778601600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:ADJUST Final Conference - Advancing just transition: Tackling distributive impacts and building societal support Insights from AdJUST Horizon
DESCRIPTION:How can Europe achieve climate neutrality without leaving anyone behind? At the AdJUST final conference\, researchers\, policymakers\, trade unions\, and civil society come together to tackle this crucial question. The event will showcase key findings on the social and labour impacts of the green transition\, present the Just Transition Vision\, and spark interactive discussions on fairness\, inclusion\, and energy poverty. \nWith the support of the partners\, IEEP is organising the final conference of the Horizon Europe project AdJUST (“Achieving a just energy transition”)\, where key results will be presented to the participants. \nAmidst the challenges of implementing the Fit for 55 package\, which aims to enable the EU to reach its intermediate climate targets by 2030\, the AdJUST partners have analysed the distributive impacts of the transition to climate neutrality and identified effective policy interventions to accompany climate action that leaves no one behind. By fostering active stakeholder engagement\, the project’s aim was to increase societal support for ambitious climate action. \nThe final conference offers a prime opportunity to present AdJUST’s Just Transition Vision and showcase key study findings on labour market impacts (including for workers and trade unions)\, broader justice dimensions beyond labour\, as well as institutional capacity. It will also feature interactive discussions on just transition\, climate\, and energy poverty\, with insights from experts\, including EU\, national and local policymakers\, trade unions\, think tanks and representatives of civil society. \n\nProgramme: \n\nKeynote from Member of the European Parliament\nBroadcasting of the “Just Transition Vision”\nPresentation of the project’s results around 4 key messages:\n\nWorkers\nTrade unions\nBeyond work\nInstitutional capacity\n\n\nInteractive discussion with first inputs from experts (policymakers\, trade unions\, think tanks and representatives of civil society)\n\n\nAdJUST is a Horizon Europe project coordinated by the CMCC Foundation and carried out by a transdisciplinary European consortium consisting of 9 EU partners\, 2 UK associated partners and other 11 EU associated partners. The objectives of AdJUST are 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.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/adjust-final-conference-advancing-just-transition-tackling-distributive-impacts-and-building-societal-support-insights-from-adjust-horizon/
LOCATION:Bruxelles
CATEGORIES:Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260423T143000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260423T153000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260319T104846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260323T142743Z
UID:11928-1776954600-1776958200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:ELEVATE-ADJUST Webinar
DESCRIPTION:ELEVATE-ADJUST Webinar\nTitle: Who is affected and why? Distributional effects of carbon pricing and the Carbon Pricing Incidence Calculator (CPIC) \nCarbon pricing is increasingly used to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and support the transition to low-carbon economies. But its success depends not only on environmental effectiveness\, but also on how the costs are shared across households and whether policies are perceived as fair. While carbon pricing can encourage cleaner choices and investment\, it may also place a greater burden on some groups depending on their income\, location\, and patterns of energy and transport use. \nCan carbon pricing be designed in a way that is socially equitable and just? In this webinar we introduce an open-source tool the Carbon Pricing Incidence Calculator to provide insights for a broader policy dialogue on design and implementation of carbon pricing schemes. The tool calculates the additional costs to households after a carbon price is introduced\, i.e. the carbon pricing incidence. Currently\, the CPIC allows users to analyze the distributional consequences effects of carbon pricing and various compensation measures in an accessible manner for almost 90 countries.  \nIn this webinar\, the researchers will address the following key questions:  \n\nWhat factors determine the acceptability of carbon pricing?\nWho is most affected by carbon pricing\, and how do the distributional effects differ across households?\nWhat types of compensation or revenue-recycling measures can reduce burdens on vulnerable households?\nHow can CPIC help policymakers\, practitioners\, and researchers assess carbon pricing scenarios and their distributional effects?\n\nPresenter: \n\nJan Steckel is Professor of “Political Economy of Climate Change” at the Technical University Munich and Head of the “Political Economy” working group at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). His research focuses on the political economy of climate policy and energy transitions\, in particular carbon pricing and compensation design\, the distributional and welfare effects of climate policy reforms\, and socially viable transition strategies such as coal phase out pathways. A central emphasis of his work lies on low and middle income countries and the governance of global commons\, combining climate\, development and public economics to design effective and socially acceptable climate policies.\n\nModerator: \n\nTheda Vetter is a Policy Analyst in the Political Economy Working Group at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. Working at the interface of research and policymaking\, she leads the group’s policy engagement at the national and international levels. She is particularly interested in how evidence-based dialogue and multilateral cooperation can help countries design just climate policies that fit their own contexts. Theda holds a Master of Development Practice from the University of California\, Berkeley\, and a Bachelor of Science in Urbanism from Bauhaus University Weimar. Before joining PIK\, she worked as a consultant for Climate Focus and Rainforest Foundation US.\n\nJoin us for an interactive session on designing and implementing carbon pricing strategies that advance fairness and equity within climate policies.  \nExplore the tool here: https://cpic-global.net/ \nRegister in advance here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/elevate-adjust-webinar/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260422T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260422T120000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260327T171428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260327T171428Z
UID:12020-1776855600-1776859200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EDITS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Toolbox for modelling sufficiency\nSpeakers: Frauke Wiese (Europa-Universität Flensburg)\, Johannes Thema (Wuppertal Institute)\, Carina Zell-Ziegler (Oeko-Institut)\, Alexander Kling (Wuppertal) \nModerator: Hu Shan (Tsinghua University) \nAbstract:\nAgainst the backdrop of slow progress in the energy transition and the challenges of meeting high levels of demand\, analyzing the potential and policy framework for reducing demand through sufficiency approaches is becoming increasingly important. Over the past five years\, the Energy Sufficiency Research Group (EnSu) has conducted intensive research on the intersection between energy sufficiency and issues related to modeling and integrating sufficiency into scenarios. The published works on sufficiency modeling are available on the EnSu website\, and are shown in light green in the following overview as contributions to demand-side modeling in energy transition scenarios.\n\nIn the webinar\, we will present the toolbox – which consists of data\, models\, and methods – and look forward to your questions and discussion.\n  \nRegister in advance: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_yLVkXuKGSL2VdXSR6kEe2Q
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/edits-webinar-9/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260420T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260420T120000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260415T125912Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260416T131001Z
UID:12094-1776682800-1776686400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Seminar-Webinar | Adapting to Heat with (in)Secure Land Rights
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Francois Bareille\, INRAE \nModerator: Francesco Granella\, CMCC \nThis webinar presents an abstract of a research paper examining the relationship between land tenure security and agricultural resilience to climate change. \nThis paper shows that regions with more secure land rights are associated with smaller heat damage to crop yields. After documenting this pattern across countries\, we identify this relationship causally using the staggered land registry reform that enhanced land tenure security in Greece. Consistent with our theory\, we find that the reform attenuates heat damage because it shifts farmers’ adaptation strategies from enlarging croplands to increasing agricultural inputs\, including capital\, labor\, and irrigation. Overall\, the reform is projected to offset at least two-thirds of Greece’s agricultural productivity losses by 2100\, underlining the crucial role of institutions in facilitating climate change adaptation. \n\nRegister here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-seminar-webinar-adapting-to-heat-with-insecure-land-rights/
LOCATION:CMCC Milan & online
CATEGORIES:Seminar,Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260325T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260325T150000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260319T112159Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260319T115533Z
UID:11943-1774447200-1774450800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Seminar-Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Public support for novel carbon removal hinges on procedural and distributive fairness\nWednesday\, March 25 at 14:00 pm an online EIEE Seminar-Webinar will be held by Michela Boldrini\, (Bocconi University & CMCC) \n\n\n\nAbstract: Alongside the need for rapid emissions reductions\, removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is emerging as a central pillar of global climate policy. Scaling up carbon removal raises pressing questions about how this can be done in an equitable and socially legitimate manner. Using vignette experiments with nationally representative surveys in six Global South and Global North countries (N=10\,852 respondents across Brazil\, Malaysia\, Saudi Arabia\, Italy\, Norway\, and the UK)\, we examine which modes of implementing novel carbon removal methods gain public support across diverse sociopolitical settings. We find that support hinges on procedural and distributive fairness: opening planning processes to public and expert scrutiny\, benefit-sharing as well as not-for-profit arrangements consistently increase public support for carbon removal across all countries and technologies. Respondents are unwilling to trade such fairness considerations for technoeconomic performance. Just governance and implementation are critical for securing public support when scaling-up novel carbon removal methods. \nRegister here: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_agJWuTSmTQ2qXKj7nXjmKg
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-seminar-webinar-5/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260325T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260325T120000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260224T221154Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260224T222632Z
UID:11797-1774436400-1774440000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EDITS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Quantifying minimum mobility and transport needs: The who\, the where and the why\nSpeaker: Marlin Arnz\, Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH and Jihoon Min\, IIASA \nModerator: John P. Pritchard\, OECD-ITF \nAbstract: The concept of “sustainable consumption corridors” bridges two topics critical to assessing energy and transport systems: human wellbeing and planetary boundaries. However\, large disagreements remain regarding how to define minimum\, essential and decent levels of demand\, which form the floor of such corridors. Aggregate approaches based upon distance travelled (e.g. passenger-kilometres) are insufficient\, as they omit why people move. To address this gap\,  “decent mobility” is defined here as the condition when an individual can enact a set of trips that allow satisfaction of their needs\, within their resources and capabilities. In the webinar we explain how this definition unifies (i) individual capabilities and resources (time\, money)\, (ii) available physical infrastructure and services\, and (iii) socio-political contexts that shape personal freedom. We show how we operationalise and quantify decent mobility with a “persona” approach. We show two case studies with very distinct mobility systems – Switzerland and Mauritius – to illustrate the flexibility of the framework. They show which methods and data sources are required to consistently assess decent mobility of individuals\, as well as travel time\, distance\, energy use\, and emissions. Overall\, the framework offers a method for evaluating present and future transport systems by putting human needs and their heterogeneity at the centre. \nThe webinar will largely build on the paper published in 2025: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2025.104306\n  \nRegister in advance: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_5ITrCne7QQ2X3GwPGNihkg
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/edits-webinar-8/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260317T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260317T150000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260203T132556Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T143255Z
UID:11766-1773756000-1773759600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:NEWPATHWAYS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:From net-zero to zero-fossil in transforming the EU energy system \nThis webinar provides an overview of the European efforts on the phase out of fossil fuels.  \nThe EU climate neutrality goal requires a strong reduction in fossil fuel use. However\, whether a complete phase-out is feasible and desirable remains unclear. Using an integrated assessment model\, we quantify the additional effort needed to achieve a nearly complete EU-wide phase-out of fossil fuels by 2050 compared to a standard net-zero scenario with remaining fossil fuels. We show that in the standard net-zero scenario fossil fuel consumption already decreases by 90% from 2020 to 2050. It is compensated by renewable power\, the switch to electric technologies like heat pumps and electric vehicles\, as well as some hydrogen and biofuels. However\, some oil and natural gas persists in hard-to-abate sectors such as the chemical industry\, aviation and shipping. Phasing them out requires the large-scale deployment of costly carbon-neutral e-fuels\, which substantially increases marginal abatement costs from 460 EUR to 630 EUR tCO2-1 (500-1000 EUR tCO2-1). Our works shows the additional transformation challenges if the EU aims to strengthen its climate policy commitment with a full fossil phase-out target. \nSpeaker: \n\nFelix Schreyer (felix.schreyer@pik-potsdam.de): Felix Schreyer is a post-doctoral researcher in the Energy Transition Lab at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. His research takes a cross-sectoral view on energy transition dynamics for reaching ambitious climate targets based on integrated assessment modeling. In particular\, he has published on German and European net-zero pathways and their implications for the role of hydrogen. \n\nModerator: \n\nLéa Hayez (lea.hayez@pik-potsdam.de): Léa Hayez works with the Integrated Assessment Modelling group at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research since 2024. She is a scientific project coordinator and researcher\, focusing on international climate policy\, and the risks of climate change for the global economy and finance sector. Léa holds a MSc. in Energy System Engineering and previously worked on climate resilience of power systems\, using participatory approaches to integrate climate risks in energy system planning.\n\nDiscussant: \n\nJessica Jewell (jewell@chalmers.se) Jessica Jewell is a Professor of Technology and Society at Chalmers University where she leads the Energy Technology and Policy (ENTAP) group. Her research focuses on the speed and mechanisms of energy transitions with a particular interest in developing probabilistic projections of technological change and the role of policy in shaping energy transitions. She is the Principal Investigator of an ERC Starting Grant on the feasibility of climate action. Before coming to Sweden in 2019\, she worked for nine years in Austria and France at an international think tank. She holds a PhD in Environmental Sciences and Policy from Central European University (Hungary)\, a joint Erasmus Mundus Masters from Lund\, University of Manchester\, and Central European University\, and a Bachelors in Geology from Brown University in the US.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/newpathways-webinar-4/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260311T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260311T150000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161303
CREATED:20260310T092234Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T092234Z
UID:11834-1773237600-1773241200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:UPTAKE webinar
DESCRIPTION:The UPTAKE monthly webinar series returns\, continuing its engaging discussions on carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies and the latest research developments. The next session in the series\, dedicated to recent publications on CDR research\, will focus on the paper Technology\, Geography and Collaboration Networks: Assessing Global Innovation and Research Funding Patterns for Carbon Removal.\n\n \n\nSpeakers:\nLivia Fritz\, Aarhus University (AU)\nFinn Müller-Hansen\, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)\n\n \n\nModerator: Kavita Surana\, Vienna University of Economics and Business\n\n \n\nIn addition to strong global emission cuts\, experts see the rapid upscaling of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) as paramount for reaching the Paris agreement target. A comprehensive view of research and innovation dynamics is crucial for the rigorous assessment of the potentials of CDR options and for guiding strategies to close knowledge gaps. Here\, we investigate funding patterns in CDR research across time\, geographies and fields of research and identify key organizations and actors in collaboration networks. We use comprehensive search queries and machine learning to identify more than 6000 research grants on twelve different CDR options. Research funding increased strongly over the past 30 years (21% p.a.)\, more than funding for climate science and technology. In comparison to carbon capture and storage\, CDR receives a higher number of grants\, but less total funding\, estimated at 4.2 bn$. Funding is highly concentrated in Europe and North America and mostly directed towards natural\, engineering and agricultural science\, with little but increasing support for social science. European funding seems to encourage research in larger consortia. However\, our analysis finds little funding specifically targeted at CDR\, highlighting potentials for strategic initiatives for accelerating innovation in CDR.\n\n \n\nUPTAKE is an EU-funded research project on CDR methods and knowledge coordinated by CMCC Foundation (EIEE Institute). 
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/uptake-webinar-7/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260311T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260311T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20260127T102622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260127T102622Z
UID:11775-1773230400-1773234000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:PRISMA Webinar
DESCRIPTION:This PRISMA Webinar brings together cutting-edge research that sheds new light on these questions\, drawing on large-scale empirical studies across Europe and innovative methodological approaches. Chaired by Johannes Emmerling (CMCC)\, the webinar will feature two presentations by researchers from the University of Geneva (UNIGE). \n  \nPresentantion 1: Identifying and validating the strongest predictors of informed energy policy support and support for climate mitigation measures across Europe \nSpeaker: Morris Krainz\, UNIGE \nAbstract: Widespread public policy support is crucial for efforts to decarbonize the energy system. Past research has proposed numerous variables as potential key predictors of support for mitigation policies but has failed to i) comprehensively evaluate and compare their predictive importance and ii) identify the strongest predictors within specific mitigation domains. We used machine learning models to identify the strongest predictors of energy policy support in informed citizens (Study 1)\, validate these results by forecasting the outcome of a real-world referendum on renewable energy in Switzerland (Study 2) and test their generalizability to public support for other climate mitigation measures across six European countries (Study 3). We identified affective responses\, societal and environmental policy-impact beliefs\, fairness perceptions and perceived trends in policy support over time as the strongest predictors of energy policy support. Using these predictors\, we achieved high accuracy in predicting support for a real-world referendum as well as support for different climate mitigation measures across Europe. \n*** \n  \nPresentantion 2: European public support for climate mitigation measures is resilient to uncertainty information \nSpeaker: Valeria Sorgato\, UNIGE \nAbstract: Public acceptance is a critical factor for the successful implementation of climate mitigation measures. Yet\, Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) often exclude this social dimension\, risking misjudging the real-world viability of the mitigation measures they are designed to model. This study explores how informed perceptions of feasibility-related uncertainties influence public acceptance\, support\, and affect towards four IAM-modelled measures: bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS)\, green hydrogen\, afforestation/reforestation\, and sustainable diets. In a survey across six European countries (Germany\, France\, Italy\, Spain\, Poland\, and the Netherlands; total N = 3\,351)\, we found that providing uncertainty information lowered acceptance\, support\, and\, to a lesser degree\, affect\, but all measures remained positively evaluated\, and differences between measures and countries remained stable. Sustainable diets and BECCS were least accepted\, particularly in Poland and the Netherlands\, where participants\, on average\, were opposed to sustainable diets. Higher perceived uncertainty\, especially regarding social and technological feasibility\, was negatively associated with acceptance and affect\, an effect that strengthened after information\, particularly for social uncertainty. Climate change beliefs emerged as the strongest predictor of acceptance among all predictive factors. Trust in scientists also contributed positively to acceptance of mitigation measures\, while trust in government and sociodemographic variables showed marginal influence. Our findings underscore the importance of combining social factors with IAMs to better reflect real-world constraints and improve the design and communication of climate mitigation policies. \n  \nThe webinar will conclude with a question and answer (Q&A) session. \n  \nRegistration required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rodpPkkPTE-j4ARqNXDdCg \n  \nThis project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 101081604 – PRISMA. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Climate\, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/prisma-webinar-5/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260219T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260219T160000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20260126T140602Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260126T140602Z
UID:11753-1771513200-1771516800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:NEWPATHWAYS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Do the new climate targets make a difference? An analysis of 2035 NDCs. \nThis webinar provides an overview and assessment of the latest round of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) with a focus on countries’ 2035 climate targets. It begins with a global snapshot of NDC submissions\, including how many countries have submitted NDCs 3.0\, the share of global emissions they represent\, and the political and institutional processes shaping these submissions. The webinar then examines the ambition of the new NDCs\, comparing 2035 targets with existing 2030 commitments and assessing whether recent updates meaningfully contribute to closing the global emissions gap. Finally\, it explores the evolution of policy projections over time\, analysing progress in narrowing the implementation gap and evaluating whether current policies are putting countries on track to meet their stated climate targets. \nSpeakers: Janna Hoppe & Luka Scheewel (NewClimate Institute). \nDr. Janna Hoppe focuses on tracking countries’ progress towards net-zero emissions by assessing mitigation actions\, climate policies\, and key drivers of greenhouse gas emissions. Before joining NewClimate\, Janna worked at the climate policy think tank Agora Energiewende\, where she focused on decarbonisation efforts in the German buildings sector. Prior to that\, she was a doctoral researcher at ETH Zurich\, where she examined the effectiveness of different mitigation policies and public support for the phase-out of carbon-intensive technologies in demand sectors. \nJan-Luka Scheewel’s work focuses on data-driven climate policy analysis. He contributes to the Horizon Europe projects ELEVATE and NEWPATHWAYS\, assessing the effectiveness of mitigation efforts. Within the Climate Action Tracker (CAT)\, he supports national assessments and leads key components of data management. He manages the Climate Policy Database (CPDB)\, synthesising climate policy data to support analytical assessments. He is also responsible for analytical inputs for DG CLIMA\, including the annual Major Emitters Report\, which assesses climate action and progress towards nationally determined contributions (NDCs) across major emitting countries. \nDiscussant: Elena Hooijschuur (PBL) \nModerator: Theofania Troupi (Climate Strategies). Theofania is a Projects Officer at Climate Strategies\, where she leads stakeholder engagement and oversees dissemination\, exploitation\, and communication activities across multiple projects. Climate Strategies operates as an international knowledge broker\, connecting researchers and policymakers to bridge the gap between science and policy and to support evidence-based climate decision-making worldwide. \nRegister in advance here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/newpathways-webinar-3/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260121T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20260121T160000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251111T144210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260105T143553Z
UID:11713-1769007600-1769011200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:ELEVATE Webinar
DESCRIPTION:ELEVATE Annual Net Zero Report 2025: Holding the Course in a Shifting World\nSpeakers: Lara Aleluia (CMCC) and Detlef Van Vuuren (PBL) \nWednesday\, January 21st\, at 3:00 pm an online ELEVATE webinar will be held by Lara Aleluia and Detlef van Vuuren. \nJoin leading ELEVATE experts and scientists to discuss the key findings from the 2025 Net Zero Report. \nThe Report provides policymakers with evidence-based insights on the current state of global climate efforts towards net-zero goals. This year’s edition offers a comprehensive assessment of the progress toward net-zero targets consistent with the Paris Agreement. Published during a time of increasing geopolitical tensions\, it explores timely topics\, including the growing focus on trade barriers\, the implications of market-based instruments\, and the role of justice. \nThe webinar will explore the main research takeaways in relation to the latest developments at COP30\, delving into the role of international cooperation in upholding and implementing ambitious climate targets. \nThe presentations will be followed by an extensive Q&A session where participants will be invited to share doubts\, comments and reflections. \nRegistration is required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SlPv6lB5R_m4wQJEn3UjrA
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/elevate-webinar-2/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251217T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251217T160000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251021T100356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251021T100356Z
UID:11691-1765983600-1765987200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:NEWPATHWAYS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Title: Navigating the black box of fair national emissions targets \nSpeaker: Mark Dekker (PBL) \nDiscussant: Nico Bauer (PIK) \nModerator: Lara Aleluia Reis (CMCC) \nAbstract: Current national emissions targets fall short of the Paris Agreement goals\, prompting the need for equitable ways to close this gap. Fair emissions allowances rely on effort-sharing formulas based on fairness principles\, yielding diverse outcomes. These variations\, shaped by normative decisions\, complicate policymaking and legal assessments of climate targets. Here we provide up-to-date numbers\, comprehensively accounting for three dimensions—physical and social uncertainties\, global strategies and equity—and the relative impact of them on each country’s emissions allowance. In the short run\, normative considerations substantially impact fair emissions allowances—directing current discussions to this debate—while global discussions on temperature targets and non-CO2 emissions take over in the long run. We identify many countries with insufficient nationally determined contributions in light of fairness and discuss implications for increased domestic mitigation and financing emissions reductions abroad—yielding a total international finance flux of $US0.5–7.4 trillion in 2030. \nRegister in advance here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/newpathways-webinar-2/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251217T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251217T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251118T151209Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251118T155425Z
UID:11723-1765972800-1765976400@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Webinar - Seminar
DESCRIPTION:How floods impact the Italian housing market\nWednesday\, December 17 at 12:00 pm an hybrid EIEE Seminar-Webinar will be held by Marco Pangallo\, researcher at CENTAI. \nMarco will present a paper titled: “How floods impact the Italian housing market”. \nAuthors: Marco Pangallo\, Ariadna Fosch\, Lorenzo Costantini\, Jacopo Lenti (CENTAI)\, Anna Bellaver (Unito)\, David Scala (Intesa Sanpaolo)\, Anna Monticelli (Intesa Sanpaolo Innovation Center) \n\n\nAbstract: Flooding is among the most frequent and damaging natural hazards in Italy\, yet its indirect effects on the housing market remain poorly understood. This study investigates how the perception of flood risk influences property values today and how these effects may evolve under future climate change. In the first phase\, we analyze data from 550\,000 mortgages across Italy to estimate the current impact of flood risk on housing prices. Our econometric analysis reveals that flood exposure depresses property values only in regions repeatedly affected by floods\, while individual events have no measurable effect — suggesting that historical memory\, rather than immediate experience\, shapes risk perception. In the second phase\, we embed this behavioral mechanism into an agent-based model (ABM) combined with climate projections to simulate future market dynamics. Results indicate that by 2050\, flood-exposed properties will lose additional value\, while safer areas will gain\, reshaping spatial housing demand.\n\n\n\nRegister in advance: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_2YKe46ARTJSwI9i_rwWuww
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-webinar-seminar-13/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251208T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251208T103000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251124T094827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T094827Z
UID:11728-1765184400-1765189800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CIRCOMOD Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Circular economy pathways for materials\, buildings\, and climate policy\n  \nJoin CIRCOMOD project for an in-depth exploration of new research advances. This session\, co-organized by CMCC\, will feature the work on global building modelling\, machinery and equipment material flows\, and the integration of circular-economy (CE) extensions into climate-economy models. \nDiscover how circular-economy measures can reshape material demand\, reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, and influence future climate policy! \n  \nFeatured Speakers & Presentations \n\nPeter Berrill\, CML-Leiden University: Advances in Global Building Modelling for a Circular Economy\n\nPeter will present updates on global building modelling in CIRCOMOD\, focusing on how CE strategies impact material demand and greenhouse gas emissions within the global building sector. \n\nMeng Jiang\, NTNU: Machinery & Equipment: The Second Most GHG-Intensive Material Use\n\nMeng will provide an overview of historical and current material use and carbon footprints for machinery and equipment production. He will present progress in developing a baseline scenario for future material use and secondary material availability\, combining IAM and input-output analysis through the EXIOFUTURES Framework. \n\nLeonidas Paroussos – E3M Integrating Circular Economy into CGE Models for Climate Policy\n\nLeonidas will discuss new developments for incorporating materials and CE measures into applied CGE models\, focusing on the GEM-E3 model. The talk covers modelling challenges and scenario results related to energy system decarbonization and the role of circular-economy measures. \n  \nRegister in advance.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/circomod-webinar/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251204T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251204T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251111T104534Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251111T104534Z
UID:11709-1764849600-1764853200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Webinar-Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Climate shift uncertainty and economic damages\nThursday\, December 4th at 12:00 pm an hybrid EIEE Seminar-Webinar will be held by Gernot Wagner. \nGernot will present his work on: “Climate shift uncertainty and economic damages” (Fillon\, Romain\, Manuel Linsenmeier and Gernot Wagner. “Climate shift uncertainty and economic damages.” Mimeo (4 November 2025)). \nAbstract: Focusing on global annual averages of climatic variables\, as in the standard damage function approach\, can bias estimates of the economic impacts of climate change. Here we empirically estimate global and regional dose-response functions of GDP growth rates to daily mean temperature levels and combine them with regional climate projections. We disentangle how much of the missing impacts are due to differences in warming versus heterogeneous damage patterns over space and time. Global damages in 2050 are around 20% higher\, when accounting for the shift in the entire distribution of daily mean temperatures at the regional scale. Differences in the shape of daily temperature distributions between climate models transform standard risk rankings based on temperature anomaly\, and increase uncertainty across climate models. JEL: O44\, Q54\, Q56 \nRegistration required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rTajb8vTSjWybKjKwjn3vQ#/registration
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-webinar-seminar-12/
CATEGORIES:Seminar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251203T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251203T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251114T162651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251117T141607Z
UID:11718-1764763200-1764766800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:CircEUlar Webinar
DESCRIPTION:As part of the CircEUlar project\, CMCC is proud to announce the launch of Circular ReBoundary\, an innovative online resource designed to support circular economy practitioners across various sectors\, particularly those working in buildings\, mobility\, and manufacturing. \nJoin Our Launch Webinar\nDiscover Circular ReBoundary in action! Join us for a live demonstration and Q&A session on December 3\, 2025\, from 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM CET.  \nGet Started\nCircular ReBoundary represents a tool for anyone committed to advancing circular economy practices while being mindful of unintended consequences. The entire team is eager to hear your feedback and learn from your experience with the platform! \n🌐 Explore Circular ReBoundary: https://circular-reboundary.com/ \n✉️ Contact us: circular.reboundary@cmcc.it
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/circeular-webinar/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251127T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251127T160000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20250922T131542Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251002T164346Z
UID:11646-1764255600-1764259200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Webinar-Seminar
DESCRIPTION:The heat is on: Heat stress\, productivity and adaptation among firms\nThursday\, November 27th\, at 3:00 pm an hybrid EIEE Seminar-Webinar will be held by Hélia Costa. \nHélia will present the paper: “The heat is on: Heat stress\, productivity and adaptation among firms” (co-authored with Guido Franco\, Filiz Unsal\, and Mudigonda Sarath). \nAbstract: This paper examines the impact of heat stress on firm-level labour productivity across 23 advanced economies from 2000 to 2021. Combining high-resolution weather data with balance sheet information\, we find that both an increase in the number of high-temperature days and the occurrence of heatwaves lead to reduced labour productivity. This effect is substantial\, more pronounced in smaller and less productive firms\, and is exacerbated by longer heatwaves\, high humidity\, and low wind speeds. We find evidence of partial adaptation: firms in warmer climates and those with prior heatwave exposure suffer smaller losses from subsequent temperature extremes. However\, the scope of current adaptation remains limited: higher temperatures relative to an already warm average result in more significant productivity losses\, and there is no evidence of adaptation to severe extreme temperatures. These results underscore the relevance of both gradual and acute climate impacts for economic performance and underscore the need for targeted adaptation policies to mitigate the long-term growth impacts of rising temperatures. \nRegister in advance: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_O-Jco0gfTo2q1_PO1ekpWQ#/registration
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-webinar-seminar-10/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251118T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251118T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20250919T174010Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250919T174010Z
UID:11640-1763467200-1763470800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:PRISMA Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Integrating societal aspects in electricity sector modeling\n\nSpeakers: \n\nVivien Fisch-Romito\, University of Lausanne\nXin Wen\, University of Geneva\n\nSpeakers \n\nEvelina Trutnevyte\, University of Geneva\n\nAbstract: \nIntegrated assessment and energy system models are challenged to account for societal transformation dynamics\, but empirical evidence is lacking on which factors to incorporate\, how and to what extent this would improve the relevance of modelled pathways. Here\, we include six societal factors related to infrastructure dynamics\, actors and decision-making\, and social and institutional context into an open-source simulation model of the national power system transition. We apply this model in 31 European countries and\, using hindcasting (1990–2019)\, quantify which societal factors improved the modelled pathways. We then demonstrate how this hindcasting could be used to inform forward-looking national electricity system transition modeling (1990–2050) to assess the socio-technical feasibility of achieving emission goals. This work paves the way to a more systematic and objective selection of societal factors to be included in energy transition modeling. \nThe webinar will conclude with a 15-minute question and answer (Q&A) session. \nRegistration required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_iriEQEnoQEOTxQ0qHKHJnQ \n  \nThis project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 101081604 – PRISMA. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Climate\, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/prisma-webinar-4/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251105T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251105T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251022T155227Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251022T160410Z
UID:11695-1762344000-1762347600@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EDITS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Integrating Demand-side Solutions for Accelerated Decarbonization of Power Supply System: Insights from Bangladesh and Thailand\n  \nSpeaker: Firuz Ahamed Nahid\, Post Doctoral Researcher\, Asian Institute of Technology\, Thailand \n  \nModerator: Jubair Sieed\, Researcher\, Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth\, Japan \n  \nAbstract: \nElectricity generation sector in Bangladesh and Thailand remain predominantly fossil fuel powered (62.6% and 67%\, respectively). Each country has set long-term climate goals (Thailand: carbon neutrality by 2050 and net-zero by 2065; Bangladesh: 41% renewables by 2041). This study constructs nationally tailored (pledged and higher ambition action) least-cost pathways for 2030 to 2050 using PyPSA-BD/TH-IDS (Integrated Demand and Supply) developed for the purpose\, coupling high-resolution spatial (30×30 km) resource availability with hourly system operation and validation against 2019 officially published data. Scenarios include (eight for Bangladesh and ten for Thailand) end-use energy efficiency (EE\, up to 50%)\, demand-side flexibility (DSF\, up to 10% load shifting) and supply-side expansion of renewable shares that span low (≤40%)\, moderate (40–70%)\, and high (&gt;70%) scales of penetration. Results show that demand side solution integrated planning reduces supply system size by avoiding overbuild of renewable expansion\, improves affordability\, and lowers resource mobilization needs including financial resources and land footprint while reducing near-term CO₂ emissions relative to supply-only pathways. By 2050\, Bangladesh’s 100% clean power case with integrated end-use efficiency and demand- side flexibility requires 172.55 GW\, ~58% less than the capacity requirement in the supply-only pathway\, with an affordable generation cost of 0.049 €/kWh\, while the current cost is ~0.80 €/kWh. The land footprint is about 1\,960 km² (~1.32% of total land area of the country). In supply-only pathways they are 3\,695 km² (~2.49% of total land area of the country). The financial resource mobilization need is €144 billion over a period of 25 years(~1.78 times lower) and employment potential is ~1.92 times higher (7.34 million) compared to the supply-side only pathway. Similarly\, for Thailand\, 100% clean electricity by 2050 requires 297.11 GW of total installed capacity\, which is ~56% of the supply-only pathway\, with 0.065 €/kWh generation cost indicates affordability in integrated demand and supply-side pathway\, while the current generation cost is ~0.089 €/kWh . The integrated end-use EE and DSF combined with supply- side expansion reduces land footprint by ~44% (3153 km 2 which is 0.61% of total land area) compared with the supply-side only pathway\, while the resource mobilization need is ~48% lower (€120.20 billion) and job creation potential is ~1.56 times higher (9.43 million). Finally\, the open-source\, nationally grounded framework of the model supports local capacity development through open collaboration and provides actionable guidance for policy making indeveloping economies and also to understand nuances of transition challenges. \nRegister in advance: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_kLmDT208Th6WX13HgiHi7A
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/edits-webinar-7/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251104T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251104T160000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20250916T094642Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250923T134257Z
UID:11612-1762268400-1762272000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:NEWPATHWAYS Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Quantifying the shift of public export finance from fossil fuels to renewable energy\nTuesday\, 4th November at 15:00 pm. \nBy providing guarantees and direct lending\, public export credit agencies (ECAs) de-risk and thus enable energy projects worldwide. Despite their importance for global greenhouse gas emission pathways\, a systematic assessment of ECAs’ role and financing patterns in the low-carbon energy transition is still needed. Using commercial transaction data\, here we analyze 921 energy deals backed by ECAs from 31 OECD and non-OECD countries (excluding Canada) between 2013 and 2023. We find that while the share of renewables in global ECA energy commitments rose substantially between 2013 and 2023\, ECAs remain heavily involved in the fossil fuel sector\, with support varying substantially across technologies\, value chain stages\, and countries. Portfolio ‘greening’ is primarily driven by members of the E3F climate club\, impacting deal financing structures and shifting finance flows towards high-income countries. Our results call for reconsidering ECA mandates and strengthening international climate-related cooperation in export finance. \nSpeaker: Paul Waidelich\, Researcher at ETH Zurich’s Energy and Technology Policy Group. \nDr. Paul Waidelich is a postdoc at ETH Zurich’s Energy and Technology Policy Group\, where he completed his PhD in 2024. His research focuses on the financing of low-carbon technologies\, the role of public financial policy\, and the financial impacts of climatic shifts. Before joining ETH Zurich\, Paul worked at NERA Economic Consulting\, advising energy companies\, regulators\, and financial investors on electricity\, natural gas\, and hydrogen markets. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Heidelberg and a Master’s degree in environmental economics from LSE. \nDiscussant: Samuel Fankhauser\, Professor of Climate Change Economics and Policy at the University of Oxford \nSam Fankhauser is Professor of Climate Economics and Policy at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment at the University of Oxford\, and Research Director of Oxford Net Zero. He is also an Official Fellow of Reuben College\, where he leads the college’s environmental change theme. Before moving to Oxford\, Sam was Director of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics. He has also worked at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)\, the World Bank and the Global Environment Facility. He was an inaugural member of the UK Climate Change Committee and a Non-Executive Director of CDC Group (now British International Investment)\, the UK’s development finance institution. \nModerator: Johannes Emmerling\, Researcher at CMCC \nJohannes Emmerling is a Senior Scientist at EIEE and co-leads its Low carbon pathways unit. Johannes holds a Ph.D. from the Toulouse School of Economics (TSE)\, a M.A. in Economics from the Free University Berlin and a B.Sc. in Economics from the University of Heidelberg. He was a postgraduate fellow in Development Cooperation at the German Development Institute\, Bonn. His main areas of research include Climate Change and Energy Economics\, Risk and Uncertainty\, Welfare Economics and Development. He has co-authored over fifty articles in peer-reviewed journals and is an Associate Editor of the Public Finance Review \nRegister here \n  \nFunded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Climate\, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/newpathways-webinar/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251104T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251104T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20250922T131112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T131112Z
UID:11643-1762257600-1762261200@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Webinar-Seminar
DESCRIPTION:The Energy Impacts of Green Remodeling: Evidence from the Building Sector\nTuesday\, November 4th at 12:00 pm an hybrid EIEE Seminar-Webinar will be held by Yeong Jae Kim. \nYeong Jae will present “The Energy Impacts of Green Remodeling: Evidence from the Building Sector”. \nAbstract: To achieve the building sector’s mid- to long-term greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets and move toward a carbon-neutral society\, the key is to improve the efficiency of existing\, aging buildings and transition them to low-carbon use. We examine the impact of the Green Remodeling Program on energy consumption rates of public buildings in South Korea using a staggered difference-in-difference approach. We see a decline in both electricity and gas consumption for public buildings that underwent green remodeling. However\, the majority of the effect on energy consumption comes later in the years for building. Overall\, green remodeled buildings\, although varying in size\, have lower energy consumption rates compared to buildings that have not participated in the program. \n\nRegister in advance: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_-H5eglaoRd6MExHOSDQ6Mg#/registration
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-webinar-seminar-9/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251103T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251103T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20250919T103735Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251023T090224Z
UID:11630-1762171200-1762174800@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:EIEE Webinar-Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Refrigeration\, Diets and Human Health: Evidence from Ghana\nMonday\, November 3rd at 12:00 pm an hybrid EIEE Seminar-Webinar will be held by Francois Cohen. \nFrancois will present the working paper: “Refrigeration\, Diets and Human Health: Evidence from Ghana” (Enoch Ntsiful and Francois Cohen\, Chair of Energy Sustainability\, Institute of Economics of Barcelona\, University of Barcelona). \nAbstract: Little is known about household-level interventions to strengthen resilience to food insecurity. Rapid electrification could enable refrigeration and transform how food is stored\, prepared\, and consumed. We provide the first causal evidence on how access to refrigeration affects food insecurity and dietary quality in a low-income country. Our identification exploits appliance breakdowns\, comparing households with functioning and broken refrigerators purchased at the same time and similar prices. Losing access to refrigeration increases food insecurity by one third and reduces consumption of animal-sourced foods\, lowering intake of vitamin B12. Refrigeration is an overlooked lever to improve diets and reduce micronutrient deficiencies. \nRegistration required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_EIXiXpEhTKO7F8Brce-XRw
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/eiee-webinar-seminar-8/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251022T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251022T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20251002T154208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251002T154234Z
UID:11671-1761134400-1761138000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:AdJUST Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Title: Decarbonisation Pathway of the Polish Economy in the EU Context: Macroeconomic\, Labour Market and Distributional Effects \nPresenters: Jan Witajewski-Baltvilks\, Katarzyna Mazanek and Zuzanna Różańska\, Centre for Climate and Energy Analyses (CAKE) \nAbstract: This presentation summarises the results of Deliverable 2.1\, which analyses the decarbonisation pathway of the Polish economy in comparison with the European Union. Using the CAKE suite of modelling tools\, including the extended d-PLACE model\, the study evaluates macroeconomic impacts\, the evolution of the Polish energy mix\, and labour market transformations. Particular emphasis is placed on sectoral restructuring\, wage dynamics\, and distributional consequences for different groups of workers. The findings highlight both the challenges and opportunities of the transition\, underlining the need for targeted policies that ensure a just and inclusive shift towards climate neutrality. \nRegister here
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/adjust-webinar-4/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251021T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251021T170000
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20250919T173824Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250919T173824Z
UID:11637-1761062400-1761066000@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:PRISMA Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Transport Transformation: Combining Lifestyle Changes with Electrification Yields Major Climate and Health Benefits\nSpeaker: \n\nJarusch Müßel \, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)\, Germany\n\nModerator: \n\nJohannes Emmerling\, CMCC Foundation – Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change\, Italy\n\nAbstract: \nWhile electrification is essential for long-term climate goals\, it alone cannot unlock the full potential of a sustainable transport future. This webinar presents findings from a new study led by researchers at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)\, which compares three key decarbonization strategies—lifestyle change\, electrification\, and efficiency improvements—using the integrated REMIND-EdgeTransport model. \nThe study shows that while electrification delivers the largest CO₂ reductions by 2050\, lifestyle changes such as shifting to shared\, active\, and public transport modes offer significant near-term climate benefits and major societal co-benefits. These include improved public health\, reduced congestion\, fewer accidents\, and cleaner air—amounting to potential net benefits of €70 billion annually in the EU by 2050. \nJoin this webinar to explore how combining electrification with behavioral shifts can create a more livable\, healthy\, and climate-resilient future\, and why integrated policy approaches are critical to achieving this vision. \nThe webinar will conclude with a 15-minute question and answer (Q&A) session. \n\nJ. Muessel\, R. Pietzcker\, J. Hoppe\, P. Verpoort\, D. Klein\, G. Luderer (2025). An integrated modeling perspective on climate change mitigation and co-benefits in the transport sector. Environ. Res. Lett.\, 20\, 094011. https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/adf23\n\nRegistration required: https://cmcc-it.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Ddh-jXbVSSSSGUMwxyhLTg \n  \nThis project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 101081604 – PRISMA. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Climate\, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/prisma-webinar-3/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251016
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251018
DTSTAMP:20260604T161304
CREATED:20250919T173607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250919T173607Z
UID:11634-1760572800-1760745599@ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com
SUMMARY:ECEMP 2025
DESCRIPTION:European Energy Transition and Society: moving towards Implementation\nThis year’s European Climate and Energy Modelling Platform Conference will take place from October 16 to 17 as a hybrid event in Brussels\, featuring segments dedicated to policy-relevant research results (mainly in person\, during the first day) as well as in-depth discussions on the latest trends in modelling development (second day\, partly also hybrid format). More info on the program and participation here \n\nECEMP Organizing Committee: Jakob Rager (Chair)\, Zoi Vrontisi  (Co-chair)\, Davide Natalini (Co-Chair)\, and Johannes Emmerling (Co-chair). For further information please contact us at: ecemp@ecemf.eu.\n\n  \nAmong the sponsoring projects is GEOCEP\, funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 870245.
URL:https://ab42158a9ffe39a495c70.admin.hardypress.com/event/ecemp-2025/
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END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR