Date: November 2019
Short description:

The fundamental aim of PARIS REINFORCE is to enhance and improve climate policymaking. In order to do this, the consortium has access to a range of sophisticated climate-economic scientific models. A key novelty of the project is its devotion to ‘demand-driven’ research. That is, the questions these models will provide insights into and the assumptions they will do this based upon are to be stakeholder-determined through an extensive and exhaustive process.

Authors:
Ben McWilliams
Georg Zachmann
Alevgul Sorman
Ester Galende
Ajay Gambhir
Alexandros Nikas
Haris Doukas
Tags:
Policy brief
Integrated assessment models
Climate policy
Climate science
Co-creation
Policy questions
Date: May 2021
Short description:

Lignite production and use in Greece has been dropping in the last decade, marking a sharp decline during COVID-19. According to the country’s National Energy and Climate Plan (NECP), lignite must be completely phased out by 2028.

Authors:
Haris Doukas
Alexandros Nikas
Tags:
Policy brief
delignitisation
Coal
Greece
NECP
Date: November 2021
Short description:

The PARIS REINFORCE project contributed to the COP26 European Commission's Policy Publication, "Climate Action in the Post-COVID-19 World", with its brief on "Investigating Optimal Allocations for Green Recovery Funds". The policy publication includes insights from the EU-funded projects CONSTRAIN, VERIFY, NAVIGATE, CASCADES/RECEIPT, ENGAGE, LOCOMOTION, and PARIS REINFORCE, on how to build forward better contributions.

Authors:
Alexandros Nikas
Dirk-Jan Van de Ven
Konstantinos Koasidis
Aikaterini Forouli
Shivika Mittal
Ajay Gambhir
Haris Doukas
Citation:

Nikas, A., Van de Ven, D.J., Koasidis, K., Forouli, A., Mittal, S., Gambhir, A., & Doukas, H. (2021). Investigating Optimal Allocations for Green Recovery Funds. In Climate Action in the Post-COVID-19 World. European Commission

Tags:
COVID-19
green recovery
COP26
Date: November 2022
Short description:

As part of its ongoing efforts towards net zero by 2050, the European Parliament and the Council have reached an agreement on the implementation of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), the EU's landmark tool to put a fair price on the carbon emitted during the production of carbon-intensive goods entering the EU and to encourage cleaner industrial production in non-EU countries.

Authors:
Sigit Perdana
Marc Vielle
Tags:
carbon border adjustments
EU ETS
developing countries