Assessing environmental and climate impacts of a dietary change with the global partial equilibrium bio-economic model, GLOBIOM
BC3-Basque Centre for Climate Change Sede Building 1, 1st floor, Scientific Park of the University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Bizkaia, SpainGLobal BIOsphere Management model (GLOBIOM, Havlík et al. 2014), developed at IIASA is a global economic land use model covering the sectors of agriculture, forestry and bioenergy. GLOBIOM can be used to explore various trade-offs and synergies around land use, ecosystem services and socio-economic objectives.
Citizen´s Assemblies, a new wave of citizen´s engagement in Europe
Climate change is often seen as a super wicked problem. Citizen participation can help to increase support for and legitimacy of policy decisions, and in this context citizens’ assemblies can be a very appropriate tool to address highly complex problems such as climate change.
Cómo tomar decisiones para afrontar la transición energética
BC3-Basque Centre for Climate Change Sede Building 1, 1st floor, Scientific Park of the University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Bizkaia, SpainCómo tomar decisiones para afrontar la transición energética 26 de Mayo de 2023 | 10:00 am - 11:30 am Online | Gratuito Tomar decisiones para afrontar […]
From the field to the experimentation lab… and back
BC3-Basque Centre for Climate Change Sede Building 1, 1st floor, Scientific Park of the University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Bizkaia, SpainThis seminar consists of three linked presentations, in which we integrate action-research participatory approaches with social experimentation to better understand collective processes of decision-making concerning common pool resources and to improve their management and governance.
Encuentro | Transición justa: políticas para la equidad y solidaridad en la transición ecológica
BC3-Basque Centre for Climate Change Sede Building 1, 1st floor, Scientific Park of the University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Bizkaia, SpainAnte la crisis climática que cada vez golpea con más fuerza nuestro país, solo cabe emprender el camino hacia una economía neutra en carbono. La transición […]
Agriculture and land use (AgLU) in GCAM: Recent updates and future prospects
BC3-Basque Centre for Climate Change Sede Building 1, 1st floor, Scientific Park of the University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Bizkaia, SpainGlobal economic and integrated assessment models are useful for understanding human-earth system dynamics under climate change. The agriculture and land use (AgLU) system is an essential component of integrated assessment, as it connects to energy, macroeconomics, and GHG emissions, and is relevant to key areas such as food security, biodiversity, and land-based mitigation measures.
Mesa redonda de BC3 sobre IA, ética y democracia
El proyecto ARIES de BC3 organiza una mesa redonda presencial el 25 de septiembre en Bilbao bajo el título “Inteligencia artificial, ética y democracia: retos y oportunidades” con la participación del Instituto de Gobernanza Democrática (Globernance), el Basque Artificial Intelligence Centre (BAIC) e Ikerbasque.
Transborder Collaboration: Fostering Knowledge Exchange and Innovation for Climate Action
The EU-funded MAIA project is hosting a press event as part of the “Fostering Knowledge Exchange and Innovation for Climate Action” event, scheduled for Tuesday, October 10th, at noon. The event will take place at the Ambiorix Center in Brussels, located at 7 Ambiorix Square, in the framework of the 21st European Week of Regions and Cities.
Think2030 Dialogue Spain
The Think2030 Dialogue – Spain will gather decision-makers and analysts from policy, business and research across Spain and Europe to debate the key sustainability issues at stake for EU policy moving towards the crucial political year for the EU in 2024.
Time for energy social science! Governing multi-scalar energy transitions across sectors
BC3-Basque Centre for Climate Change Sede Building 1, 1st floor, Scientific Park of the University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Bizkaia, SpainEnergy transitions are underway everywhere simultaneously, or so one wants to think. They are in fact resisted vigorously, reshaped surreptitiously, and stripped of meaning altogether upon closer examination in unfortunately many circumstances. The urgent need for rapid action imbues large powerful actors with deep pockets with greater ability to wrest control of processes labelled energy transitions, while more inclusive, democratic, locally situated approaches cause barely an occasional flutter if measured in capital investments and gigawatt hours of clean energy production and fossil fuel displacement.