The consortium, lead by the Global Climate Forum, will start mid-2020 a new research project called TIPPING+ on Enabling Positive Tipping Points towards clean-energy transitions in Coal and Carbon Intensive Regions (CCIR). eco-union will be mainly responsible for stakeholders engagement and dissemination activities. Total amount of the project is around 3 millions and will last for 3 years (2020-2023).
Why at one or several points in time do Coal and Carbon Intensive Regions (CCIR) flip into fundamentally different development trajectories and embrace clean-energy transformations? TIPPING+ will focus on the critical concept of Social-Ecological Tipping Points (SETPs) to inquire how a much more robust scientific understanding of the socioeconomic, psychological, cultural, gender and political processes leading to SETPs can be used to support clean-energy transitions in CCIR or prevent catastrophic or undesirable outcomes in other ones (e.g. populism and anti-democratic attitudes).
TIPPING+ will carry out empirical analyses and advance the state-of-the-art on both negative and positive tipping points. A main focus will concern the participatory co-production of knowledge on the driving forces and deliberate tipping interventions for positive tipping points toward energy transitions in European CCIR. A typology based on at least 20 regional case studies will be generated with an early engagement of key practitioners examining: i) New trends, changes and impacts of energy transitions on demographic structures and geographical distribution patterns; ii) Community, gender and psychological factors related to energy transitions; iii) Policy interventions and governance factors, and iv) Economic transformations on employment, distributional welfare and energy and natural resources.
The consortium is led by the Global Climate Forum (Germany) with the participation of the following research centers and think tanks:
- Institute for Environmental Decisions, Technical University of Zurich (Switzerland)
- Centre for Environmental Psychology Research, Sapienza University of Roma (Italy)
- Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (Germany)
- Paris School of Economics (France)
- Nordland Research Institute (Norway)
- Wegener Center for Climate and Global Change, University of Gaz (Austria)
- TeesLab, University of Piraeus (Greece)
- Palacky University (Czech Republic)
- WesPort Consulting (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
- National University of Political Studies and Public Administration (Romania)
- Institute for Structural Research (Poland)
- Aalborg University (Denmark)
- Su.Re.Co (Indonesia)