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A list of all pages that have property "HasDescription" with value "Reduction in emission factors as a function of Climate policy.". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 26 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • Domestic climate policy  + (Planned and/or implemented national climate and energy policies, such as taxes, feed-in tariffs, renewable targets, efficiency standards, that affect projected emission reduction.)
  • Implementation of biofuel targets  + (Policies to enhance the use of biofuels, ePolicies to enhance the use of biofuels, especially in the transport sector. In the Agricultural economy component only 'first generation' crops are taken into account. The policy is implemented as a budget-neutral policy from government perspective, e.g. a subsidy is implemented to achieve a certain share of biofuels in fuel production and an end-user tax is applied to counterfinance the implemented subsidy.to counterfinance the implemented subsidy.)
  • Biofuel policy  + (Policies to foster the use of biofuels in transport, such as financial incentives and biofuel mandates and obligations.)
  • Policy interventions and components overview  + (Policy interventions are implemented in a Policy interventions are implemented in a model component (mostly one). The result of this implementation affects other model components. Each component contains a Policy intervention Table on its 'Policy issues' page describing the effects of policy interventions. Use the link in the 'Affects components' column to navigate to the components Policy issues page, (*) denotes the implementing component.e, (*) denotes the implementing component.)
  • Policy interventions overview  + (Policy interventions are implemented in components and affects the results of other components. The overview displays policy interventions per policy theme, their description, components implementing the intervention and affected components.)
  • Energy policy  + (Policy to achieve energy system objectives, such as energy security and energy access.)
  • Expected nr of affected people - grid  + (Population expected to be exposed to floods per year.)
  • Potential crop and grass yield - grid  + (Potential crop and grass yield, changing over time due to climate change and possibly soil degradation. In some components, i.e. 'Agricultural economy' regional aggregations of the dataset which depend on the actual land-use area, are used.)
  • Potential natural vegetation - grid  + (Potential natural vegetation type/biome, based on distribution of plant functional types.)
  • Potential bioenergy yield - grid  + (Potential yields of bioenergy crops.)
  • Presence of natural pest control - grid  + (Presence of natural pest control.)
  • Child underweight  + (Prevalence of undernourishment in children.)
  • Private consumption  + (Private consumption reflects expenditure on private household consumption. It is used in IMAGE as a driver of energy.)
  • Livestock production  + (Production of livestock products (dairy, beef, sheep and goats, pigs, poultry).)
  • Production targets for energy technologies  + (Production targets for energy technologies can be set to force technologies through a learning curve.)
  • People dependent on solid fuel  + (Proportion of population using traditional biomass and coal for cooking and heating.)
  • Prevalence of undernourishment  + (Proportion of the population with insufficient food intake to meet dietary energy requirements.)
  • Radiative forcing  + (Radiative forcing of greenhouse gases, ozone, and aerosols.)
  • Radiative forcing factors  + (Radiative forcing per greenhouse gas.)
  • Rainwater consumption - grid  + (Rain water consumption by crops.)
  • Fertiliser use efficiency  + (Ratio of fertiliser uptake by a crop to fertiliser applied.)
  • Irrigation project efficiency  + (Ratio of quantity of irrigation water required by the crop (based on soil moisture deficits) to the quantity withdrawn from rivers, lakes, reservoirs or other sources. This parameter is given at country level.)
  • Irrigation conveyance efficiency  + (Ratio of water supplied to the irrigated field to the quantity withdrawn from the water source, determining the quantity of water lost during transport. This parameter is defined at country level.)
  • Improve behaviour  + (Reduce the health impacts of malnutrition and inadequate access to safe drinking water, basic sanitaion and modern sources of energy, through, for example, improving female education, promoting good hygiene and providing good indoor good ventilation)
  • Subsidies on modern energy  + (Reduces the costs of modern energy to reduce traditional energy use (can be targeted to low income groups).)
  • Reduced erosion risk - grid  + (Reduction in erosion risk by natural vegetation.)
  • Flood protection - grid  + (Reduction in flood risk by natural vegetation.)
  • Reduction of waste/losses  + (Reduction of losses in the agro-food chain and waste after consumption.)
  • Demand traditional biomass  + (Regional demand for traditional bioenergy.)
  • Crop production  + (Regional production per crop.)
  • Regression parameters  + (Regression parameters of suitability assessment.)
  • Relationship income and emission factor  + (Relationship between GDP and emission factors.)
  • Aquatic MSA - grid  + (Relative Mean Species Abundance of original species in lakes, rivers and wetlands.)
  • Erosion risk - grid  + (Risk of soil erosion caused by water.)
  • Rules on use of technology  + (Rules determining how different types of power plants are used.)
  • SMASH  + (SMASH provides teaching and consulting activities in mathematics, human sciences, energy and environmental economics. It has participated in a series of research programs under FP6)
  • SO2 emissions  + (SO<sub>2</sub> emissions, per source (e.g. fossil fuel burning, deforestation).)
  • GDP per capita - grid  + (Scaled down GDP per capita from country to grid level, based on population density.)
  • Energy intensity parameters  + (Set of parameters determining the energy use per unit of economic activity (in absence of technical energy efficiency improvements).)
  • IMAGE land management 3.2  + (Short description)
  • TIMER 3.2  + (Short note on this version)
  • Soil types and profiles (S-World)  + (Soil profiles based on the HWSD (Harmonised World Soil Database) and on the ISRIC-WISE international soil profile dataset)
  • Soil properties - grid  + (Soil properties that have an effect on vegetation growth and hydrology. These characteristics differ between soil types. Relevant characteristics are soil texture and depth and water holding capacity)
  • UN  + (Source for population projections in the IMAGE framework)
  • SRI (species richness index) - grid  + (Species richness calculated from MSA and species area curves.)
  • Agricultural land use suitability - grid  + (Suitability of land in a grid cell for agriculture and forestry, as a function of accessibility, population density, slope and potential crop yields.)
  • Land suitability - grid  + (Suitability of land in a grid cell for agriculture and forestry, as a function of accessibility, population density, slope and potential crop yields.)
  • Implementation of sustainability criteria in bio-energy production  + (Sustainability criteria that could become binding for dedicated bio-energy production, such as the restrictive use of water-scarce or degraded areas.)
  • More sustainable forest management  + (Sustainable forest management aims for maiSustainable 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.d leave the remaining part in the forests.)
  • Non-CO2 taxation policies  + (Taxes greenhouse gas emissions in agriculture to achieve cost-optimal mitigation in the agricultural sector.)