Supported Events

9th Atlantic Workshop on Energy and Environmental Economics

The Atlantic Workshop on Energy and Environmental Economics (AWEEE) is a biennial scientific meeting, born in 2004, which is organized by Economics for Energy with the collaboration of CEPE (ETH Zurich) and CURE (Ruhr-Universität Bochum) and the support of REDE (Universidade de Vigo) and ECOBAS. The workshop has become an important outlet for the discussion and debate on state-of-the-art research on energy and environmental issues, with a limited number of participants who come from all around the world. The AWEEE combines keynote lectures on specific topics by prestigious academics with the presentation of research by invited speakers and by other participants through an open call for papers.

The AWEEE takes place on the pleasant island of A Toxa, in the Northwestern Spanish area of Galicia. The ninth edition of the workshop, due in 2020 but postponed to 2022 because of COVID, will be in-person and will include keynote lectures by Natalia Fabra (University Carlos III) and Lucas Bretschger (ETH Zürich). Additionally, the 2022 AWEEE will have invited presentations and paper discussions by Stefan Ambec (Toulouse School of Economics), Juan-Pablo Montero (PUC Chile), Barbara Praetorius (HTW Berlin), and Beatriz Yordi (European Commission).

Deadline for paper submissions: 7 May 2022

Full information is available here

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Events

FSR Climate 7th Annual Conference on the Economic Assessment of European Climate Policies

29 NOVEMBER 2021 @ 10:00 AM – 30 NOVEMBER 2021 @ 4:00 PM CET

The conference will cover the main climate-related existing policies at EU, national, international and sub-national levels. It will include three sessions on Energy Efficiency and Renewables, Environmental taxation, and Emissions trading. In addition, the conference will comprise a keynote speech from Estelle Cantillon, and a policy session focused on carbon market integration.

Due to the travel and public gathering restrictions taken to limit the spread of COVID-19, the FSR Climate Annual Conference will be held online through Zoom Webinar. Register here

ChairSimone BORGHESI, FSR Climate – European University Institute

Monday 29 November

10:00-12:00 – Session on Emissions trading

  • Regina BETZ, Zurich University of Applied Sciences – ZHAW
  • Aleksandar ZAKLAN, DIW Berlin
  • Kenneth BRUNINX, University of Leuven
  • Frans DE VRIES, University of Aberdeen Business School

14:00-16:00 – Session on Environmental taxation

  • Xavier LABANDEIRA, University of Vigo
  • Stefano CARATTINI, Georgia State University
  • Mirjam KOSCH, PIK Potsdam
  • Axel OCKENFELS, University of Cologne

Tuesday 30 November

10:00-11:00 – Keynote Speech

  • Estelle CANTILLON, Université Libre de Bruxelles and Toulouse School of Economics

11:10-12:40 – Policy Session “Deepening international cooperation on emissions trading: possible reforms for integration”

  • Stefano VERDE, FSR Climate – European University Institute
  • Michael PAHLE, PIK Potsdam
  • Susanne DRÖGE, SWP Berlin
  • Artur RUNGE-METZGER, Former Director at the European Commission

14:00-16:00 – Session on Energy Efficiency and Renewables

  • Anna CRETI, Université Paris Dauphine – PSL
  • Francesco RICCI, Université de Montpellier and CEE-M
  • Enrica DE CIAN, Ca’ Foscari Unversity of Venice and CMCC
  • Michael POLLITT, University of Cambridge
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Supported Events

Reform of the EU ETS: does the market stability reserve need a new design?

 

The EU ETS is the cornerstone of the European climate policy covering about 45% of the EU’s greenhouse gas emissions. It follows the polluter pays principle under a cap-and-trade mechanism, whereby firms covered by the ETS purchase, sell and exchange emissions allowances representing one tonne of CO2-eq.

Within this carbon market, the Market Stability Reserve has the objective to increase resilience to demand shocks, deliver investment signals, and raise synergies with other climate and energy policies. It consists of a rule-based mechanism that adjusts the number of allowances to be auctioned to the market surplus by controlling the number of allowances in circulation in the carbon market. The surplus of allowances determines the response of the MSR:

  • If the surplus exceeds a certain threshold, a predetermined percentage of the surplus is withheld from auctions and added to the reserve;
  • if the surplus is lower than another threshold, some allowances are taken from the reserve and injected into the market through auction.

The European Commission’s proposal for MSR Review is planned for June 2021, in the context of a broader reform of the EU ETS to include new sectors in its scope and to support the new EU pledge to reach climate neutrality by 2050. In the publication discussed during this talk, the authors argue that a new MSR design appears necessary. They identify the risks that arise from the current MSR design and propose a feasible way to address them in the upcoming review of the EU ETS.

In this event hosted by Jean-Michel GlachantSimone Borghesi will discuss with Grischa Perino and Jos Delbeke the MSR and the main findings of the paper. 

Host:

Jean-Michel Glachant, Director of the Florence School of Regulation

Speakers:

  • Simone Borghesi, Director of FSR Climate, European University Institute and EAERE POC Secretary General
  • Grischa Perino, Professor, University of Hamburg
  • Jos Delbeke, EIB Chair on International Carbon Markets, School of Transnational Governance, European University Institute and EAERE POC Chairman

The paper:

EU ETS Market Stability Reserve needs a new design, Grischa Perino, Michael Pahle, Fabian Pause, Simon Quemin, Hannah Scheuing and Maximilian Willner, 2021

Read more:

EU Emissions Trading System, Series Cover the Basics FSR, 2021

The EU ETS needs a new autopilot: a proposed reform for the MSR, Grischa Perino, LIFE DICET Blog, 19 March 2021

The EU ETS at a crossroads: The MSR review as a defining moment, Michael Pahle and Simon Quemin, LIFE DICET Blog, 19 June 2020

Emissions trading systems with different price control mechanisms: implications for linking – Report for the Carbon Market Policy Dialogue, Giulio Galdi, Stefano F. Verde, Simone Borghesi, Jürg Füssler, Ted Jamieson, Emily Wimberger, Li Zhou, Florence School of Regulation – Climate, LIFE DICET Project, 2020

#FSRTalks 

Live interviews with experts from the broader network of the school to showcase and discuss a recent work (a book just published, exciting study, innovative project) in a light and interactive way.

Hosts: Prof. Jean-Michel GlachantIlaria ContiSwetha Baghw

Website

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