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This chapter is an excerpt from a study commissioned by the European Parliament, which examines EU subsidies for agriculture, fisheries, transport, energy and regional development. Based on proven methodologies for the identification and assessment of environmentally harmful subsidies, the study assesses the sustainability level of the sectoral policies and makes recommendations for a reform that would contribute to the alignment of the EU budget towards a more sustainable growth. The following sections provide the main findings of one of the largest fields of expenditure within the EU budget, the structural and cohesion policy.
The main objective of AIRP-SD was to address the urgent need to stimulate innovation in Research, Technological development and Demonstration (RTD) processes in order to enhance the prospects of RTD contributing positively to processes and strategies leading to radical improvements in the sustainability of production-consumption systems. This Milestone One Report was the first of three status reports, summarising the interim findings of the first three work packages since the start of the project in January 2002.
A future-oriented and sustainable "Leasing Society" is based on a combination of new and innovative serviceoriented business models, changed product and material ownership structures, increased and improved eco-design efforts, and reverse logistic structures. Together these elements have the potential to change the relationship between producers and consumers, and thereby create a new incentive structure in the economy regarding the use and re-use of resources. While the consumer in a leasing society buys a service (instead of a product), the producer in a leasing society retains the ownership of the product (instead of selling it) and sells the service of using the product. This creates producer incentives to re-use, remanufacture, and recycle products and materials and could become a cornerstone of the circular economy, depending on how the leasing society is implemented. While a predominantly positive picture of the success of a leasing society model and related business cases emerges from the bigger part of the available literature, this paper argues that the resource efficiency of respective business cases is highly dependent on the specific business case design. This paper develops a more cautious and differentiated definition of the leasing society by discussing relevant mechanisms and success factors of leasing society business cases. The leasing society is discussed from a micro business-oriented and a macro environment-oriented perspective complemented by a discussion of conditions for successful business models that reduce environmental impacts and resource footprints.
Leasing society : study
(2012)
Although small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) contribute considerably to Germany's carbon emissions, regional savings and cooperative banks - SMEs' most important financiers - hardly consider this aspect in lending to these businesses. However, given Germany's commitment to climate neutrality by 2045, suitable approaches for injecting climate finance into these SME lending processes are greatly required. Against this background, the paper at hand aims to introduce the specific case of regional banks into the debate on green finance and green banking and suggest future research in this context. In discussing the state of research on the peculiarities of regional savings and cooperative banks, we outline the resulting opportunities and limitations for climate impact assessments in SME lending. We argue that while the dual bottom-line orientation of regional banks in Germany precludes them from applying simple positive or negative screenings, their in-depth knowledge about local clients and circumstances enables them to be active and engaging partners for the green transformation of SMEs. Nonetheless, we explain why developing solutions to utilise this knowledge for climate finance by integrating climate impact assessments into routine lending processes remains a particularly challenging task.
In early September 2014, about 4.000 scientists, activists and artists at the 4th International Conference on Degrowth sent out two messages.
1. Industrialized societies will change, either by disaster or by design. Accelerated resource exploitation and climate change can force societies into a transition. Or they swiftly develop new forms of economic, political and social organization which respect the planetary boundaries.
2. "Degrowth" has become a new social movement which translates scientific insights into cultural change, political change and social practice. Hence, the conference itself was an experiment on the potentials and limits of share economy, commoning and sufficiency.
A team of young scholars and activists from different German research institutes and non-govern- mental organisations prepared the conference. The team of the Wuppertal Institute was partly involved in the preperation of the conference. Scientists from all research groups took part in the conference, presenting and discussing project results.
The publication is a collection of contributions of the Wuppertal Institute to the conference and covers pivotal issues of the degrowth-debate: indicator development (Freyling & Schepelmann), working time reduction (Buhl), feminist theory (Biesecker & Winterfeld), and urban transition (Best).
Die Autoren fassen die Entwicklung Urbaner Produktion und der damit verbundenen ökologischen Beeinträchtigungen zusammen. Vor dem Hintergrund einschlägiger Forschung werden Methoden der Quantifizierung ökologischer Wirkungen Urbaner Produktion mit ihren globalisierten Lieferketten dargestellt. Der Artikel schließt mit einer Darstellung möglicher Perspektiven faktenbasierter, partizipativer Planung Urbaner Produktion.
An der Schwelle zum 21. Jahrhundert steht die Umweltpolitik in Europa vor großen Herausforderungen. Es gilt den hohen Anspruch des Amsterdamer Vertrages umzusetzen, der eine Integration von Umwelt-, Wirtschafts- und Sozialpolitik vorsieht. Wenn dies der Umweltpolitik in Europa bis zur Jahrtausendwende gelingt, wird sie sich somit zu einer Politik der Nachhaltigkeit weiterentwickeln. Andernfalls droht Umweltpolitik wieder in den Status einer zweitrangigen Sektorpolitik zurückzufallen. In dieser Studie wird versucht, dieser drohenden Entwicklung entgegenzutreten. Ausgehend von einer Beschreibung der Ausgangslage der Umweltpolitik in der Europäischen Union (Kap. 2) werden anschließend mögliche Ziele einer weiterentwickelten Umwelt- bzw. Nachhaltigkeitspolitik erörtert. Eine besondere Bedeutung kommt hierbei den Indikatoren zu, anhand derer die Erreichung von Nachhaltigkeit gemessen werden kann (Kap. 3). In der Folge werden Bedingungen und Möglichkeiten einer Umsetzung ökologischer Ziele auf europäischer Ebene geprüft. Zu diesem Zweck werden zunächst die Wirkungen ökologischer Strategien auf ökonomische und soziale Systeme umrissen; danach werden einige mögliche Maßnahmen und Prioritäten für die Ressorts vorgeschlagen, in denen laut Beschluß der Europäischen Räte von Cardiff und Wien die Integration vorrangig umgesetzt werden soll (Kap. 4). Schließlich werden dem Europäischen Rat in Helsinki strategische Ziele vorgeschlagen und ein Formulierungsvorschlag für die Schlußfolgerungen der finnischen Präsidentschaft gemacht (Kap. 5), um so die Integration von Umweltbelangen in dem Sinne voranzubringen, der in den Kapiteln 3 und 4 beschrieben wird.