Periodic Reporting for period 3 - CINTRAN (Carbon Intensive Regions in Transition - Unravelling the Challenges of Structural Change)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2023-05-01 do 2024-04-30
CINTRAN provides a scientific evidence base to govern regional decarbonization processes, to design effective policies and coping strategies corresponding to this challenge and to support regional stakeholders in implementing strategies that enable them to engage proactively and constructively with the transformative processes in their respective regions. It did so by creating new innovative knowledge, and by applying and diffusing this knowledge in carbon-intensive regions in the EU. As a result, CINTRAN contributed to a better understanding of the complex issues related to regional structural change and yielded practical recommendations for a just and successful clean-energy transition.
Specifically, CINTRAN has met the following objectives:
- Establish a robust theoretical foundation for integrating diverse disciplinary insights of transformations in carbon-intensive regions and understanding how these transformations are shaped by injustice concerns.
- Develop a generalizable understanding of the dynamics, patterns, costs and impacts of decarbonising carbon-intensive regions.
- Identify successful coping strategies and policy mixes and quantify policy costs for successful and socially-responsible decarbonisation of carbon-intensive regions.
- Provide tools for carbon-intensive regions to self-assess, monitor and compare their transition progress and develop policy recommendations for regional, national and European policy-makers.
- Build a Regions in Transition Academy, Webinar Series and Knowledge base for knowledge exchange in carbon-intensive regions in transition.
Building on theoretical insights, CINTRAN combined qualitative and quantitative methods to empirically study both structural factors as well as agency, i.e. the ways and means in which regional stakeholders and policy makers can manage the structural adjustments.
Quantitative methods were applied to identify key socio-economic implications of decarbonization for the most vulnerable regions in Europe. CINTRAN research has broken down the energy system implications of national climate and energy plans at the regional level and quantified their socio-economic impacts on regional value creation and employment. On that basis we were also able to provide a quantitative assessment of the effectiveness of the Just Transition Mechanism to alleviate some of those impacts.
A combination of qualitative methods have been applied to study in depth four regional case studies through three complementary analytical lenses:
First, we will studied the regions’ economic dependence from the carbon-intensive industry, also taking into account other mega-trends such as globalization, automation and digitalization. Second, we studied the institutional set-up and politics of decarbonization in the four regions, including with respect to the role of populism and anti-democratic attitudes. And third, we studied aspects such as migration, gender and various dimensions of inequality that may impinge on a region’s capacity to manage the transition in a just and equitable way.
CINTRAN will also investigated ways in which regional stakeholders and policy makers respond to the transformative changes at the political, economic, social or cultural level. We assessed and categorized coping strategies, practices that successfully restore or create agency and help regional stakeholders to adapt to changes. To support agency on the part of regional policy makers, CINTRAN developed a tool to help them to self-assess and monitor the progress of transformation and evaluate the policy mix in place to facilitate a just transition. Finally, CINTRAN made the knowledge created available to practitioners and academics by sustaining the coaltransitions.org knowledge hub, through a series of thematic webinars and the CINTRAN Transition Academies.