Modelling and Measuring Sustainable Lifestyle Transition to 2050

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This project has received funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 613194

EU-InnovatE: Sustainable Lifestyles & Green Economy in Europe to 2050

MODELING AND MEASURING SUSTAINABLE LIFESTYLE TRANSITION TO 2050

11 October 2016

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Agenda

15:00 Webinar opens

15:05 Introduction & contextSimon Pickard, Director International Programmes, ABIS

15:10 Presentation of emerging evidence & findingsLiz Varga, Director Complex Systems Research Centre, Cranfield University

15:35 Questions and comments

15:55 Summary & forthcoming events

16:00 Webinar closes

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Context: Sustainable Lifestyles at EU Level

Strategic policy objectives:

1. Promoting smart, sustainable and inclusive growth in the single market

2. Managing an ageing population while reducing current levels of energy, transport and resource use

3. Rethinking consumption / production systems as part of a transition to low-carbon economy by 2050

Ref: SPREAD 2050 (www.sustainable-lifestyles.eu)

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EU Policy Research Questions

i. Links between economic, ecological, human and technological systems and their influence on consumers' values and behaviour

ii. Short and long-term obstacles and opportunities associated with the transition to European sustainable lifestyles and green economy

iii. New ways and new business models to manage natural resources while reducing consumption and improving quality of life

iv. Prospects for sustainable lifestyles and the green economy (i.e. trends up to 2050)

EU-InnovatE Consortium

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Key Idea

„ ... investigatethe creative, innovative and entrepreneurial roles of usersin developing novel sustainable products, services and systems (Sustainable Lifestyles 2.0).“

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Towards User Innovation

WP 7 Synthesis

SL 2.0

WP 8 Dissemination

WP 9 Management

WP 6 Policy Design for SL 2.0

WP 5 Measuring Trends SL 2.0

WP 3Company

SustainabilityInnovation

Integrating Users

WP 4User

SustainabilityInnovation and

Entrepreneurship

WP 2 Future of SL 2.0

WP 1 Past and Present of SL 2.0

This project has received funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 613194

Modeling and Measuring Sustainable Lifestyle Transition to 2050PRESENTER:Liz Varga, Director Complex Systems Research Centre, Cranfield University

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Introducing the Presenter

Professor Liz Varga, Cranfield University

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Central Research Questions / Problems

Are there scenarios of domestic consumption behaviours which achieve sustainable lifestyles?

Can the transition from contemporary lifestyles to sustainable lifestyles be achieved via user innovations in domestic consumption behaviours?

How can this transition be achieved?

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Unit of Analysis – Measures of Performance

InnovationKPI

Scorecards

Sustainability

UN SDGSPREAD

CSR

User ParticipationCo-creation

Co-production

SUI

SOI

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Approach of the EU-Innovate model

Creating artificial societies representative of any scale of community Measuring the sustainability performance of a society’s consumption

contemporary or some future desirable society Evaluating, by domain (food, energy, living and mobility) the impact

of adoption of user innovations upon sustainability performance Accelerating transition toward sustainable lifestyles

by increasing the speed of sustainable innovation adoption via introduction of policies or societal changes

Analysing transition pathways to sustainable domestic lifestyles Identifying user innovation types from detailed case studies Examining adoption rates that have the greatest potential to achieve

sustainable lifestyles

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Simulation at any scale

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Measuring performance

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Evaluating impact of SUI adoption

45% adoption of electric vehicles in UK

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Accelerating transition

Inert households adoption % yearly on population – always inert – active Adoption % based on society, policy intervention, network effects, …

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Analysing transition pathways

Scenario context dependent

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User innovation types – empirical study based

Integrated impact

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User innovation types – empirical study based

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Adoption rates – various impacts

Innovation types comparison

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Model assumptions

Representation is not the real thing

Magritte

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Emerging Findings

For each domain: food, energy, living and mobility, representing household consumption, the sum of all innovation types has the potential to transition contemporary European societies to sustainable levels of consumption.

Public policies and societal interventions which have the potential to accelerate the adoption of sustainable innovations have a quantifiable effect on carbon emissions and kilograms consumption.

Systemic innovations which represent changes to a contemporary scenario, or describe a potential future, such as the SPREAD augmented scenario, demonstrate alternative possible ways of meeting sustainable consumption targets.

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Model interface

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Core Activities – wider work-package 5

1. Measurement markers review

2. Mid-term project synthesis

3. Sustainable Futures detail design and simulation

4. Simulation evaluation and re-design

This project has received funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 613194

Questions & Feedback from Participants

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Summary & Forthcoming Events

FINAL CONFERENCE

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22

HOSTED BY ABIS @ ATELIER DES TANNEURS IN BRUSSELS

EXPLORATION OF PATHWAYS TO ACCELERATE SUSTAINABILITY ENTREPRENEURSHIP

NO CONFERENCE FEES!

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For More Information

www.euinnovate.com

This project has received funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 613194

Thank you for your time!