Virtual Meeting Platform on The Socio-Economic Opportunities from European Renewables

During this CityLab event, we investigated different European approaches to socio-economic opportunities related to European renewables and outlined ways in which more equitable strategies can be developed, aligning with a just transition approach.

Virtual Place

Platform Zoom

Date

Start: 22.11.2022
End: 22.11.2022

Partners

Design Impact Transition , MaREI centre for energy , Climate and Marine

Pressures on security of supply and geopolitical tensions make shifting our energy systems to renewables more important than ever. The Europe-wide "Renewable Energy Directive" (2018) encourages citizens and communities to participate, however, without a prescriptive guidance to approach with multiple perspectives, leading to a variety in forms that social benefits accrued by citizens through renewable energy and energy infrastructure developments.

During this CityLab event, we investigated different European approaches to socio-economic opportunities related to European renewables and outlined ways in which more equitable strategies can be developed, aligning with a just transition approach. This webinar was especially interesting for academics and students who focus on sustainability transitions, city transformations, energy sector, participation in energy, citizen empowerment, economic models, inclusive governance arrangements and related subjects.

27 participants: 17 students, 2 staff members, 5 academics, 3 representative of social stakeholders, 2 returning participants

  • Citizen investment models / crowdfunding:

    • Challenges: investment does not necessarily confer ‘psychological sense of ownership’
    • Stakeholders involved: crowdfunding platforms, investors, RECs
  • Citizen co-ownership

    • Challenges: Financing, Legal definitions, defining ‘majority ownership’
    • Stakeholders involved: Incumbent developers / private companies, community residents, municipalities / local authorities
  • Energy surplus donation

    • Challenges: RES CAPEX, REC management, REC bureaucracy
    • Stakeholders involved: Energy vulnerable households, community NGO’s, Public Building owners, Local community development groups
  • Community benefit funding schemes with strands

    • Challenges: community capacity, representation & inclusion
    • Stakeholders involved: landowners, local community groups and special interest groups, local community development groups, community representatives, community committees

Tags

UNIC CityLabs

Themes

Sustainability | sustainability

Type of Case

Workshop

Languages

English

Organizing unic universities

university logo university logo

Cookie Settings