Assessing Climate Change Risk in EUrope

HORIZON.2.5HORIZON-RIAID: 101081358
EC Contribution
€49,921
Consortium Size
15 orgs
Summary

ACCREU will contribute to the just transition towards climate resilience in the EU, its Member States, and regions, by co-creating and co-delivering with a wide array of stakeholders, new knowledge and actionable insights that connect the challenges of adaptation and mitigation with the multiple and new challenges our society is facing. At the scientific level, it will provide a comprehensive, integrated, co-created, socio-economic evaluation of future climate risk under different adaptation and mitigation scenarios, across European countries, sectors, households, and business types. Specific attention will be paid to non-market impacts on biodiversity, ecosystems, and health. ACCREU will advance models and methods for climate risk assessment, and integrated adaptation decision-making. Novel investigations will be developed to assess poverty, equity, financial, and fiscal implications of climate risk and the related policies. At the societal/economic level, ACCREU will engage stakeholders involved in different adaptation decision types to design practical solutions to successfully mainstream climate resilience and adaptation into decision-making processes. ACCREU’s case studies will examine adaptation decisions in the following thematic areas: risk assessment, ecosystems and nature-based solutions, land use and food systems, water management, protection and management of critical infrastructures including transport and supply chains, health, and human well-being, and justice. Stakeholders will represent decision makers at the local (e.g. city or municipal authorities, local resource managers), national/regional (e.g. regional and national authorities), and pan European level (e.g. EEA, EIB). Some case studies will be pan-European whereas some other case studies will be carried out in Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, United Kingdom. To ensure effective uptake and long-term use of its results, the co-designed applied case studies will involve EU-level stakeholders, such as Directorate-Generals, the JRC, the EEA, the Mission Adaptation, as well as local practitioners, businesses, and authorities.

Consortium (15)

Project Results (16)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (11)
How an economic and financial perspective could guide transformational adaptation to sea level rise
npj Climate Action· 2025DOI
Kees C. H. van Ginkel, Bart Rijken, Marco Hoogvliet, Wesley van Veggel, W. J. Wouter Botzen, Tatiana Filatova
Investment Needs and Benefits from the Adaptation of Cyprus to Climate Change
Cyprus Institute Policy Brief· 2025
Theodoros Zachariadis
Weather-induced power plant outages: Empirical evidence from hydro and thermal generators in Europe
Energy Economics· 2025DOI
Alberto Sergio, Francesco Pietro Colelli
Adaptation Gap Report 2024: Come hell and high water - As fires and floods hit the poor hardest, it is time for the world to step up adaptation actions
· 2024DOI
null null, Maria del Pilar Bueno Rubial, Alexandre Magnan, Lars Christiansen, Henry Neufeldt, Anne Hammill, Keron Niles, Thomas Dale, Timo Leiter, Lucy Njuguna, Chandni Singh, Dennis Bours, Blanche Butera, Nella Canales, Dipesh Chapagain, Kit England, Pieter Pauw, Paul Watkiss, Blane Harvey, Lindy Charlery, Georgina Cundill-Kemp, Sara Traerup, Joshitha Sankam
Heat stress and the labour force
Nature Reviews Earth and Environment· 2024DOI
Shouro Dasgupta, Elizabeth J.Z.Robinson, Soheil Shayegh, Francesco Bosello, R. Jisung, Park, Simon N. Gosling
Inequalities in global residential cooling energy use to 2050
Nature Communications· 2024DOI
Giacomo Falchetta, Enrica De Cian, Filippo Pavanello, Ian Sue Wing
The state of the art and future of climate risk insurance modeling
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences· 2024DOI
Michiel Ingels, Wouter Botzen, Jeroen Aerts, Jan Brusselaers, Max Tesselaar
Understanding inter-farm inequalities in extreme weather event impacts: Insights from the Dutch agricultural sector
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction· 2024DOI
Anoek J. van Tilburg, Thijs Endendijk, Hans de Moel
Adaptation Finance Gap Update 2023
· 2023
Paul Watkiss, Dipesh Chapagain, Georgia Savvidou, Pieter Pauw, Blanche Butera
Adaptation Gap Report 2023: Underfinanced. Underprepared. Inadequate investment and planning on climate adaptation leaves world exposed
· 2023DOI
null null
Policy Brief on Climate Adaptation Economics and Finance in the UK
· 2023
Paul Watkiss
Deliverables (4)
Websites, patent fillings, videos etc.
Other Results (1)
Periodic Reporting for period 1 - ACCREU (Assessing Climate Change Risk in EUrope)