Browse data: PolicyIntervention
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- Application (39)
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Showing below up to 13 results in range #1 to #13.
- Apply emission and energy intensity standards (Apply emission intensity standards for e.g. cars (gCO2/km), power plants (gCO2/kWh) or appliances (kWh/hour)., Component: Energy conversion, Energy demand)
- Capacity targets (It is possible to prescribe the shares of renewables, CCS technology, nuclear power and other forms of generation capacity. This measure influences the amount of capacity installed of the technology chosen., Component: Energy conversion)
- Carbon tax (A tax on carbon leads to higher prices for carbon intensive fuels (such as fossil fuels), making low-carbon alternatives more attractive., Component: Climate policy, Energy conversion, Energy demand)
- Change the use of electricity and hydrogen (It is possible to promote the use of electricity and hydrogen at the end-use level., Component: Energy conversion)
- Climate change adaptation (Adaptation to climate change reduces climate damage. The model can optimally calculate the optimal adaptation level based on marginal adaptation costs and marginal avoided damage, but an alternative adaptation level can be used as well., Component: Climate policy)
- Effort- or burden-sharing of emission reductions (Evaluation of burden-sharing or effort-sharing regimes. Which regions or countries should contribute, when and by how much to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions?, Component: Climate policy)
- Emission trading policy (Analysis of the effect of rules for trading emission credits on regional abatement costs., Component: Climate policy)
- Excluding certain technologies (Certain energy technology options can be excluded in the model for environmental, societal, and/or security reasons., Component: Energy conversion)
- Expanding Reduced Impact Logging (Increasing the share of produced wood yielded with Reduced Impact Logging (RIL) practices instead of conventional logging practices., Component: Forest management)
- Financing climate policy (Developed countries could provide financial resources to assist developing countries by implementation of mitigation and adaptation policies. To mobilise these funds, several mechanisms exist, of which the effect can be analysed, Component: Climate policy)
- Increase forest plantations (Increase the use of wood from highly productive wood plantations instead of wood from (semi-) natural forests., Component: Forest management)
- More sustainable forest management (Sustainable forest management aims for maintaining long-term harvest potential and good ecological status of forests (e.g. the nutrient balance and biodiversity). This can be implemented by (i) enlarging the return period when a forest can be harvested again; (ii) only using certain fractions of the harvested biomass and leave the remaining part in the forests., Component: Forest management)
- Reduction proposals (pledges) (Evaluation of current reduction proposals by countries and policy options (for the next 10-20 years)., Component: Climate policy)