Summary
The FIND project will develop an innovative framework to assess the feasibility and social desirability of limiting global warming through the diffusion of negative emission technologies. Current global climate action is deeply insufficient to deliver the objectives of the Paris Agreement and containing global warming to 1.5 °C will likely require the deployment of carbon dioxide removals. However, the technologies to sequestrate and store carbon from the atmosphere are currently immature, risky, and highly questioned. Understanding the effective diffusion potential of carbon removal methods and their socioeconomic and environmental impacts is pivotal to design future climate action. The FIND project aims to ensure that negative emission technologies act as an enabler, not a barrier, of long-run sustainable development. It brings together different disciplines – namely, climate science, economics, innovation studies, climate finance, integrated assessment, and agent-based modelling - in a coherent and synergic whole. FIND is designed to provide breakthrough evidence about two crucial and under-investigated aspects of carbon removal solutions: (i) how their techno-economic paradigms evolve and relate to the broader technological landscape, and (ii) how immature and uncertain technologies can be financed to provide social value rather than speculative interest. By combing innovation, finance, and political economy into a quantitative theory of carbon removal operationalization unfolding at global scale, FIND will expand the state-of-the-art in climate-energy-economy modelling and reassess decarbonization pathways. The project will evaluate climate and non-climate policies to create robust, no-regret policy portfolios supporting a rapid and sustainable path to a net-zero society. FIND will be of high relevance for public policy and civil society, especially considering Europe’s commitment to reach carbon neutrality by 2050 while spurring green and inclusive growth.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101117427 |
Start date: | 01-01-2024 |
End date: | 31-12-2028 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 1 499 825,00 Euro - 1 499 825,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
The FIND project will develop an innovative framework to assess the feasibility and social desirability of limiting global warming through the diffusion of negative emission technologies. Current global climate action is deeply insufficient to deliver the objectives of the Paris Agreement and containing global warming to 1.5 °C will likely require the deployment of carbon dioxide removals. However, the technologies to sequestrate and store carbon from the atmosphere are currently immature, risky, and highly questioned. Understanding the effective diffusion potential of carbon removal methods and their socioeconomic and environmental impacts is pivotal to design future climate action. The FIND project aims to ensure that negative emission technologies act as an enabler, not a barrier, of long-run sustainable development. It brings together different disciplines – namely, climate science, economics, innovation studies, climate finance, integrated assessment, and agent-based modelling - in a coherent and synergic whole. FIND is designed to provide breakthrough evidence about two crucial and under-investigated aspects of carbon removal solutions: (i) how their techno-economic paradigms evolve and relate to the broader technological landscape, and (ii) how immature and uncertain technologies can be financed to provide social value rather than speculative interest. By combing innovation, finance, and political economy into a quantitative theory of carbon removal operationalization unfolding at global scale, FIND will expand the state-of-the-art in climate-energy-economy modelling and reassess decarbonization pathways. The project will evaluate climate and non-climate policies to create robust, no-regret policy portfolios supporting a rapid and sustainable path to a net-zero society. FIND will be of high relevance for public policy and civil society, especially considering Europe’s commitment to reach carbon neutrality by 2050 while spurring green and inclusive growth.Status
SIGNEDCall topic
ERC-2023-STGUpdate Date
12-03-2024
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