The ecological transition raises societal issues at the crossroads of purely economic and technical considerations as well as ethical and political considerations.
Carbon taxation, technological support policies and financial instruments interact in a systemic way and raise issues about the macroeconomic effects of transition policies. Other dimensions (demographics, financial instability) must also be considered to bring attention to potential overlooked opportunities and challenges ahead.
The question of a “just transition” has become increasingly pressing. Empirical and theoretical analyses are needed to shed further light on these issues and to contribute to the conversation on the rationale and legitimacy of the ecological transition, in addition to providing information to decision makers and citizens.
This axis currently evolves around two core topics:
Antonin Pottier (EHESS).
Emmanuel Combet (Ademe), Victor Court (IFP School), Hadrien Lantremange (INRAE Toulouse), Jacques Mazier (University Paris 13), Florent McIsaac (World Bank), Adrien Nguyen-Huu (University Montpellier).
Edouard Dossetto (University Panthéon-Sorbonne).
Paper published in Economic Theory (Vol. 62, June 2016). This paper examines quantity-targeting monetary policy in a twoperiod economy with fiat money, durable goods and default.
In situations of water shortage and unreliability of the public water supply service, the rehabilitation of old water supply systems could constitute an additional source of supply. The chapter questions both the rationale of their rehabilitation and the state of nowledge associated with their use, based on the example of the old city of Ahmedabad in...
Hydrogen valleys, which integrate renewable energy sources, hydrogen infrastructure, and end-use applications, play a crucial role in decarbonizing industrial energy hubs. However, the large-scale deployment of hydrogen is constrained by limited renewable electricity availability and high technology costs. A key insight from our analysis is that the merit order of hydrogen end-uses is dynamic, evolving...
No Upcoming Events found!