Laka Foundation

Publication Laka-library:
Roadmap 2050: A pracitcal guide to a prosperous low-carbon Europe: Volume 2: Policy recommendations (2010)

AuthorEuropean Climate Foundation
DateApril 2010
Classification 6.01.2.16/66 (NP & GREENHOUSE EFFECT - NUCLEAR POWER YES OR NO SOLUTION & SCENARIOS)
Front

From the publication:

ROADMAP 2050
PRACTICAL GUIDE TO A PROSPEROUS,
LOW-CARBON EUROPE

P R E F AC E

In July 2009, the leaders of the European Union and the G8 announced an objective 
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 80% below 1990 levels by 2050. In 
October 2009 the European Council set the appropriate abatement objective for 
Europe and other developed economies at 80-95% below 1990 levels by 2050. In 
support of this objective, the European Climate Foundation (ECF) initiated a study 
to establish a fact base behind this goal and derive the implications for European 
industry, particularly in the electricity sector. The result is Roadmap 2050: a 
practical guide to a prosperous, low-carbon Europe, a discussion of the feasibility 
and challenges of realizing an 80% GHG reduction objective for Europe, including 
urgent policy imperatives over the coming five years. The scientific basis and 
the political process behind the setting of that objective are not discussed.

This is the second of three volumes. Volume 1 is a technical and economic 
assessment of a set of decarbonisation pathways. This volume addresses the policy 
and regulatory implications arising from the analysis and Volume 3 will address 
the broader implications for society. ECF strongly recommends that further work 
be carried out that will help stakeholders understand the required change in more 
detail, including the different ways in which various regions would experience 
the transformation.

Roadmap 2050 breaks new ground by outlining plausible ways to achieve an 80% 
reduction target from a broad European perspective, based on the best available 
facts elicited from industry players and academia and developed by a team of 
recognized experts rigorously applying established industry standards.

This study is funded by ECF, which itself is funded solely by private philanthropic 
organizations (1). ECF does not have financial ties to EU political bodies, nor to 
business. Representatives of the European Commission and its services have 
provided strong encouragement for the development of this undertaking and have 
given welcome guidance regarding the objectives and the approach. Along with 
representatives of other EU institutions, notably the European Parliament and 
Council of Ministers, the European Commission has been consulted periodically 
throughout the course of the project. In addition, a wide range of companies, 
consultancy firms, research centers and NGOs have counseled ECF in the preparation 
of this report. These organizations can be found in the acknowledgements section.

(1). ECF's funding sources are fully disclosed on its website,
www.europeanclimate.org

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