Periodic Reporting for period 1 - CHOICE (Mainstreaming Integrated Assessment Models by embedding behavioural change and actor heterogeneity, and increasing their outreach to citizens, communities and industrial actors)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2023-11-01 al 2025-04-30
The project conducts large-scale demonstrations in five countries (Austria, Spain, Greece, Colombia, South Africa) using digital tools, serious games, and data storytelling to promote climate-smart food choices. It aims to drive impact by developing accessible IAM interfaces, running behavioural change campaigns, and delivering policy recommendations aligned with the European Green Deal and Paris Agreement.
WP3, led by IIASA, updated and validated the GLOBIOM baseline diets for all CHOICE pilot countries, incorporating heterogeneous consumer data from the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and the Global Dietary Database (GDD). In T3.2 the FeliX model is undergoing regionalisation in order to capture socioeconomic differences across five world regions and enhancement through the integration of lifestyle frameworks that are able to capture the social dynamics of behavioural change across four lifestyle categories. T3.3 enhanced the FABLE-Calculator with undernourishment indicators and refined livestock-specific emission factors. T3.4 developed the first version of CHOICE interactive simulation environments (FeliX and FABLE-Calculator dashboards) and submitted Deliverables D3.1 and D3.2 in M18.
WP4 reviewed and categorised over 200 digital tools under T4.1 (D4.1) publishing the results on Zenodo. In T4.2 ICCS designed the “Shrink Your Food Waste” app, incorporating Inoqo’s LCA-based CO2 data. T4.3 released the Climate Survivors game demo on Steam and Itch, reaching over 10,000 people. Under T4.4 LIBRA developed the data storytelling methodology and produced the first CHOICE data story portfolio, resulting in the timely submission of Milestone MS4.
WP5 laid the scientific groundwork for assessing food system transformations by co-developing scenario narratives with IAM modelers (T5.1 D5.1) using the FABLE-Calculator. Key advances included NOA’s spatial climate indices for the Spanish olive oil sector and the integration of GLOBIOM's spatial land-use change capabilities via DownscalR. Under T5.2 IIASA and SDSN collaborated to refine methods linking food system changes to land-use transitions and ecosystem service impacts.
WP6 laid the essential groundwork for the pilot demonstrations. In particular, T6.1 developed comprehensive pilot action plans (D6.1) for all five demonstration sites. Three strategic clusters were formed: Spain-Colombia, Austria-Greece, and South Africa, facilitating knowledge exchange and methodological alignment. All five pilot sites have initiated their preparatory activities (execution of participatory labs etc.) and are fully set for the demonstration phase to launch in Month 22.
WP7 established CHOICE's dissemination, exploitation and communication framework, launching the website in M3 and generating 378 social media posts with over 83,000 impressions. Key deliverables (D7.2 D7.3) outlined the communication and dissemination strategy, supported by the CHOICE Ambassador Program and partnerships with networks like GEOGLAM and EO4SDG. CHOICE also began joint dissemination with SISTER projects OrganicClimateNET, NEVERMORE, and ClieNFarms. Preliminary list of Key Exploitable Results (KERs)as well as Common and Individual Exploitation Plans were established. Lean Business Model Canvas for selected KERs were created.
In addition, CHOICE democratises access to complex climate models through its Interactive Simulation Environments (ISE). These web-based tools allow non-expert stakeholders, from local policymakers to food industry representatives, to explore climate scenarios and test interventions in real-time. This represents a fundamental shift from IAMs as black-box tools accessible only to specialised researchers to transparent, user-friendly instruments for participatory decision-making. The serious game developed under WP4, Climate Survivors, further extends this democratisation, reaching audiences who would never engage with traditional climate science communication.