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A green COVID-19 recovery of the EU basic materials sector: identifying potentials, barriers and policy solutions

O. Chiappinelli, T. Gerres, K. Neuhoff, F. Lettow, H. de Coninck, B. Felsmann, E. Joltreau, G. Khandekar, P. Linares, J.C. Richstein, A. Sniegocki, J. Stede, T. Wyns, C. Zandt, L. Zetterberg

Climate Policy Vol. 21, nº. 10, pp. 1328 - 1346

Summary:

This paper explores climate-friendly projects that could be part of the COVID-19 recovery while jump-starting the transition of the European basic materials industry. Findings from a literature review on technology options in advanced development stages for climate-friendly production, enhanced sorting, and
recycling of steel, cement, aluminium, and plastics, are combined with insights from interviews with 31 European stakeholders in these sectors about the practical and economic feasibility of these technology options. Results indicate that with an estimated investment of 28.9 billion Euros, up to 20% of EU’s basic materials could be produced through low-emission processes or additional recycling by 2025 with technologies that are commercially available or at pilot scale today. However, our stakeholder consultation also shows that in order to make these short-term investments viable, six main barriers need to be addressed, namely: (i) the lack of effective and predictable carbon pricing, (ii) the limited availability of  affordable green electricity, (iii) the lack of a regulatory framework for circularity, (iv) low technology market readiness and funding, (v) the lack of infrastructure for hydrogen, CO2 and power, and (vi) the lack of demand for climate-friendly and recycled materials. Based on these insights, the paper proposes elements of a policy package that can create a framework favourable for investments in these technologies; these policies should ideally accompany the recovery package to give credibility to investors that the business case will last beyond the recovery period.


Spanish layman's summary:

En el estudio se identifican varias opciones tecnológicas para la producción y el reciclaje de materias primas de forma amigable para el clima que están listos para su aplicación a nivel industrial. Se requieren cambios regulatorios y una robusta política industrial para asegurar su implementación.


English layman's summary:

The study identifies various technology options for the climate-friendly basic material production and recycling that are ready for industrial scale-up. We show that there can be a business case for these technologies, but robust and streamlined policies are needed to support their implementation.


Keywords: Green COVID-19 recovery; industrial decarbonization; basic materials; policy package; EU green deal; technology readiness


JCR Impact Factor and WoS quartile: 6,056 - Q1 (2021); 5,300 - Q1 (2023)

DOI reference: DOI icon https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2021.1922340

Published on paper: November 2021.

Published on-line: May 2021.



Citation:
O. Chiappinelli, T. Gerres, K. Neuhoff, F. Lettow, H. de Coninck, B. Felsmann, E. Joltreau, G. Khandekar, P. Linares, J.C. Richstein, A. Sniegocki, J. Stede, T. Wyns, C. Zandt, L. Zetterberg, A green COVID-19 recovery of the EU basic materials sector: identifying potentials, barriers and policy solutions. Climate Policy. Vol. 21, nº. 10, pp. 1328 - 1346, November 2021. [Online: May 2021]


    Research topics:
  • Analysis of sustainable energy policies
  • Circular economy