
I4CE – Institute for Climate Economics
I4CE – Institute for Climate Economics
8 Projects, page 1 of 2
Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2029Partners:STICHTING CLIMATE-KIC INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION, EV ILVO, LATVIJAS LAUKU KONSULTACIJU UN IZGLĪTĪBAS CENTRS, ULiège, INTIA +59 partnersSTICHTING CLIMATE-KIC INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION,EV ILVO,LATVIJAS LAUKU KONSULTACIJU UN IZGLĪTĪBAS CENTRS,ULiège,INTIA,CDA FRANCE,GRAND ALFRED,INRAE,GRUENLANDZENTRUM NIEDERSACHEN/BREMEN E.V.,INNOVATIONSCENTER FOR OKOLOGISK LANDBRUG P/S,CHAMBRE REGIONALE D'AGRICULTURE DU CENTRE - VAL DE,CENTRE OF ESTONIAN RURAL RESEARCH AND KNOWLEDGE,ITALIAN BREEDERS ASSOCIATION,SZE,WR,IDELE,ECOLOGIC INSTITUT ge,SDRUZHENIE ASOTSIATSIYA NA ZEMEDELSKITE PROIZVODITELI V BULGARIYA,BIOECONOMY CLUSTER,IBNA,ASSOCIATION OF PROAGRIA CENTERS,THE AGRICULTURAL TRUST,VIESOJI ISTAIGA LIETUVOS ZEMES UKIO KONSULTAVIMO TARNYBA,CONSULAI,ELEVEO,DEVENISH RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT AND INNOVATION,OMKI,LWK Steiermark,AGROVAST LIVSMEDEL AKTIEBOLAG,ACTA,BioSense,University of Novi Sad,REGENERATION ACADEMY FOUNDATION,ASESORIA INTEGRAL AGROALIMENTARIA SL,UNCEIA,AUA,I4CE – Institute for Climate Economics,AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH CENTRE ARC,MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY AND FISHERIES,Teagasc - The Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority,University of Almería,UASVMB,ASOPROVAC,CLIMATE-KIC HOLDING BV,BBG,COEXPHAL,NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL ADVISORY SERVICE,GreenSupplyChain DIH,Slovak University of Agriculture,APO CONERPO SOC COOP AGRICOLA,IFOAM EU GROUP,CREA,CAFS,CRPA,NATSIONALNA OVTSEVADNA I KOZEVADNAASOTSIATSIYA,WU,ZLTO,Department of Agriculture Food and the Marine,ELO ASBL,LEIBNIZ-INSTITUT FUER AGRARTECHNIK POTSDAM-BORNIM EV (ATB),AGRICULTURAL ADVISORY CENTREIN BRWINOW,CONVIS,CRA-W,BB PROJECTFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101060212Overall Budget: 21,487,100 EURFunder Contribution: 21,487,100 EURClimate Farm Demo is a unique pan-European network of Pilot Demo Farmers (PDFs) covering 28 countries and all pedo-climatic areas. Its overall aim it to accelerate the adoption of Climate Smart Farming (CSF) practices and solutions by farmers and all actors of the Climate Smart Agriculture Knowledge & Innovation Systems with a view of adapting agricultural production systems to climate change and of achieving a carbon neutral agricultural sector by 2050, thereby meeting the targets of the EU Climate strategy. To reach this objective, the project adopts a Multi-Actor approach by connecting 1500 Pilot Demo Farmers and their Climate Farm Advisors (CFAs) at European and national levels to increase knowledge exchange & cross-fertilisation in their respective AKIS. The CFA’s will support the PDF’s in implementing Adaptation and Mitigation Measures suggested by contextualised guidelines and will assess & monitor their environmental performance thanks to harmonized methodologies & tools. Technical and social innovations covering a broad range of thematic areas will be demonstrated to the wider farming community across six annual demo-campaigns (4500 demo-events) supporting interactive and peer to peer learning. New and innovative CSF solutions will be co-created in 10 Living Labs spread across Europe and lessons learned from multi-actor innovation will be shared and scaled. A set of public and private rewarding mechanisms will be identified, proposed and demonstrated to the AKIS actors, thus incentivising the uptake of CSF solutions while ensuring sustainable business models. Strategic and operational cooperation will be organised with projects, flagship initiatives and policy-makers at European and national levels in order to share knowledge, organize coordinated actions, and produce policy briefs. Finally, to accelerate the wide spreading and uptake of results, an ambitious dissemination, exploitation and communication strategy will be deployed at EU and national levels
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2015 - 2018Partners:University of Graz, ENVIROS, SEI, CDC CLIMAT, ZEW +6 partnersUniversity of Graz,ENVIROS,SEI,CDC CLIMAT,ZEW,I4CE – Institute for Climate Economics,DTU,CEPS,UPRC,STICHTING RADBOUD UNIVERSITEIT,STICHTING JOINT IMPLEMENTATION NETWORKFunder: European Commission Project Code: 642242Overall Budget: 2,066,650 EURFunder Contribution: 2,064,400 EURThe CARISMA project has two overall objectives. First, through effective stakeholder consultation and communication leading to improved coordination and assessment of climate change mitigation options, it aims to benefit research and innovation efficiency as well as international cooperation on research and innovation and technology transfer. Second, it seeks to assess policy and governance questions that shape the prospects of climate change mitigation options, and discuss the results with representatives from the CARISMA target audiences to incorporate what can be learned for the benefit of climate change mitigation. The experienced, interdisciplinary and diverse CARISMA consortium has an extensive track record of collaborating in Framework Programme projects. It combines capacity for technological, environmental, economic and social assessment with deep expertise across a range of climate change mitigation options, encompassing mature and emerging technologies as well as practices and governance, which are increasingly identified as important areas to achieve deep greenhouse gas emission reductions. Communication with, and support to, the CARISMA target audiences are an integral part of the project. In all inventory and assessment activities envisaged in the project, interaction with stakeholders is a key part. To facilitate coordination and avoid overlap, these activities are overseen by a dedicated work package. The target audiences include national and local policymakers, innovation and strategy managers in business and industry, research funding organisations and the research community. The CARISMA project will result in online platform services, face-to-face interactions, policy briefs and publications and increased capacity in the EU, Accession Countries and beyond, to address the climate change challenge and move towards a green, innovative and thriving global economy.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2026Partners:GREENGOLD MANAGEMENT SRL, CLIMATE-KIC HOLDING BV, VU, Ştefan cel Mare University of Suceava, KUL +10 partnersGREENGOLD MANAGEMENT SRL,CLIMATE-KIC HOLDING BV,VU,Ştefan cel Mare University of Suceava,KUL,STICHTING CLIMATE-KIC INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION,UGOE,UPV,BOKU,CENTRE DE LA PROPIETAT FORESTAL,EV INBO,UEF,EFI,I4CE – Institute for Climate Economics,CREAFFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101060309Overall Budget: 5,337,550 EURFunder Contribution: 5,337,550 EURForests represent the largest terrestrial carbon sink that can be economically managed to combat climate change. In this context, sustainable forest management will become a major tool of the EU Green Deal on the road to an economic growth decoupled from resource use. But essential forest functions are increasingly threatened by climate change and related natural disturbances, while the knowledge regarding the effects of forest management on biophysical and biogeochemical fluxes exchanged between land and atmosphere are too limited. Accordingly, the overall objective of the INFORMA project is to increase the science-based knowledge on multi-purpose sustainable forest management under climate change. More particularly, it will analyse the trade-offs and synergies between different objectives considering the environmental integrity and climate feedbacks, social acceptability and economic feasibility of future European forest practices, including zero management options. It will identify options for maintaining carbon sinks, in addition to fostering productivity, supporting genetic diversity, biodiversity conservation, and maintaining soil and water resources in the different European ecoregions. Applying a multi-actor approach, INFORMA will 1) Quantify differences in major ecosystem functions affecting climate processes between managed and unmanaged forests across Europe; 2) Analyse socio-institutional patterns of innovative forest-based mitigation and adaptation strategies; 3) Search for management alternatives (including no-management) and simulate their effect on a variety of ecosystem functions; and 4) Improve forest carbon certification for a cost-effective operationalisation and integration of climate smart practices in forestry. INFORMA main outputs will be best regional management practices, implementation pathways for the European forestry sector, recommendations for forest carbon certification improvements and for economic-institutional policy action.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2018Partners:UOXF, KEPLER CAPITAL MARKETS, TRUCOST, CARBON TRACKER INITIATIVE, S&P Global Indices UK Limited +4 partnersUOXF,KEPLER CAPITAL MARKETS,TRUCOST,CARBON TRACKER INITIATIVE,S&P Global Indices UK Limited,I4CE – Institute for Climate Economics,2° INVESTING INITIATIVE,The CO-Firm GmbH,MCGRAW HILL INTERNATIONAL (U.K.) LIMITEDFunder: European Commission Project Code: 696004Overall Budget: 2,193,330 EURFunder Contribution: 2,167,990 EURThe transition to a low-carbon economy creates financial risk and opportunities. A key barrier for investors in responding to this risk relates to the shortcomings of the current landscape of asset valuation and credit risk models in capturing this financial risk and opportunity. The objective of the project is to develop an Energy Transition (ET) risk and opportunity assessment framework. The objectives of this framework are to help investors and policy makers understand the materiality of energy transition risk and opportunity, help investors assess this materiality for bond and equity portfolios, and engage with investors & policy makers on responding to these risks in order to mobilize capital for sustainable energy investment. The activities focus on seven key industries. The core focus is on building bottom-up databases, Energy transition risk and opportunity scenarios net margin impact models. These outputs will then feed into newly developed equity valuation (developed by Kepler-Cheuvreux) and credit risk models (developed by S&P Capital IQ). The project enables investors and analysts to implement these models into their investment decision-making, either through the assessment framework or directly equity and bond indices developed in the course of the project.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2024Partners:CE, [no title available], Universidade de Vigo, VUB, ECOLOGIC INSTITUT ge +5 partnersCE,[no title available],Universidade de Vigo,VUB,ECOLOGIC INSTITUT ge,WiseEuropa,I4CE – Institute for Climate Economics,UEF,WU,CLIMATE ANALYTICS GMBHFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101003884Overall Budget: 3,997,070 EURFunder Contribution: 3,997,070 EURTo achieve climate neutrality by 2050, EU policy will have to be reoriented. It needs work simultaneously towards climate neutrality across the economy rapidly enough to achieve the Paris Agreement’s goals, while delivering on a broad range of issues, from competitiveness and productivity to employment and health. The concept of the European Green Deal captures this overarching narrative. However, to mobilise the creative, financial and political resources to achieve the required degree of technological, economic and behavioural change, the EU also needs a governance framework that facilitates cross-sectoral policy integration and allows citizens, public and private stakeholders to participate in the process and to own the results. 4I-TRACTION analyses what transformative climate policy could look like for the EU. Based on a stocktake of existing climate policies and their performance, it will spell out a number of policy avenues and an overarching governance framework, to describe how the current mix of EU climate and energy policies needs to evolve in the 2020s to set course for climate neutrality by 2050. The analysis will be structured around four cross-cutting core challenges, the “4 I’s”: 1) fostering breakthrough Innovation, 2) shifting Investment and finance, 3) rolling out the Infrastructure for a climate-neutral and resilient economy, and 4) Integrating solutions across sectors. This structure reflects that a systemic transformation will need to evolve beyond sectoral policy approaches. Incorporating scientific insights and policies from outside the EU as well as examining how the EU’s efforts interact with those of other key countries, the analysis will also include the global context. The analysis will be thoroughly grounded in science, but also aligned with the EU's dynamic political environment. To receive input, provide feedback and validate conclusions, the project will closely engage with a broad set of stakeholders throughout its lifespan.
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