CECILIA2050 - Choosing Efficient Combinations of Policy Instruments for Low-carbon development and Innovation to Achieve Europe's 2050 climate targets

Abstract:cecilia.png

Europe needs to transform itself to a low-carbon economy by mid-century. The existing instrument mix needs to be scaled up drastically to initiate the changes needed across the economy. As the scale and scope of instruments increases, their interaction becomes more important, as do constraints on the political, legal and administrative feasibility. To evaluate their efficiency and effectiveness, instruments cannot be viewed in isolation; understanding and managing their interaction becomes key.

The CECILIA2050 project analyses the performance of existing climate policy instruments and their interaction, and maps pathways for the evolution of the instrument mix in Europe. It describes ways to improve the economic efficiency and environmental effectiveness of the instrument mix, and to address constraints that limit their performance or feasibility. These include public acceptance, availability of finance and the physical infrastructure, but also the administrative and legal framework.

The first, backward-looking part of the project takes stock of the existing instrument mix in the EU and its Member States, and assesses their coherence and past performance. It describes which factors determine their efficiency and effectiveness, and measures their effects on equity, innovation and competitiveness. The second, forward-looking part maps pathways towards a more ambitious policy mix for 2030 and 2050, starting from the current EU climate policy. With economic instruments at the heart of the mix, it describes and models how the instrumentation could evolve, based on scenarios of the magnitude of change required for the low-carbon transformation. To this end, it combines the state of the art modelling tools with qualitative and participatory methods. To complement the EU-level analysis, the effects of EU climate policies are quantified at the global level. To ensure policy relevance and mobilise practitioners’ knowledge, the project engages with stakeholders in different way.

Project details

Scientific responsability: Massimiliano Mazzanti

 Funding source: 7th Framework Programme

Call: FP7 - Environment (including climate change)

Start date 01-09-2012 - end date 31-08-2015

Total cost: 3.470.770 €

EU contribution: 2.797.381 €

Eu contribution to UniFe: 84.304 €

Participants

  • ECOLOGIC INSTITUT gemeinnützige GmbH, Coordinator (Germany)
  • UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON (United Kingdom)
  • UNIVERSITEIT LEIDEN (Netherlands)
  • UNIVERZITA KARLOVA V PRAZE (Czech Republic)
  • GESELLSCHAFT FUER WIRTSCHAFTLICHE STRUKTURFORSCHUNG MBH (Germany)
  • VERENIGING VOOR CHRISTELIJK HOGER ONDERWIJS WETENSCHAPPELIJK ONDERZOEK EN PATIENTENZORG (Netherlands)
  • SOCIETE DE MATHEMATIQUES APPLIQUEES ET DE SCIENCES HUMAINES (France)
  • UNIWERSYTET WARSZAWSKI (Poland)
  • BC3 BASQUE CENTRE FOR CLIMATE CHANGE • KLIMA ALDAKETA IKERGAI (Spain)
  • STICHTING VU-VUMC (Netherlands)