Sustainability Assessments for the Low-Carbon Economy

4th Interdisciplinary PhD expert course for young researchers

October 16-18th, 2024

The EU has established a roadmap for transitioning to a low-carbon economy, which includes (i) advancing clean technologies and low-carbon energy, (ii) reducing resource consumption, (iii) enhancing energy security, and (iv) improving public health. As a result, there is a significant need for methods that evaluate the environmental, economic, and societal impacts of actions taken at both industrial and policy levels.

To address this need, Hasselt University, with support from KU Leuven, the University of Antwerp, EURECA-PRO are jointly organizing the interdisciplinary PhD expert course on the state-of-the-art sustainability assessment tools: Techno-Economic Assessment (TEA), Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), and Real Options analysis (ROA).

Programme

Day 1 - October 16th, 2024

Time

Event

08.30-09.00

Registration

09.00-09.30

Welcome

09.30-10.30

Introduction to LCA (lecture)

dr. Giovanna Sauvé, KU Leuven

10.30-10.45

Coffee break

10.45-12.30

Introduction to LCA (practice)

dr. Giovanna Sauvé, KU Leuven

12.30-13.30

Lunch Break

13.30-16.30

Student presentations

4 presenters + discussants

16.30-16.45

Coffee break

16.45-18.45

Student presentations

3 presenters + discussants

Day 2 - October 17th, 2024

Time

Event

09.30-10.30

Introduction to TEA (lecture)

Prof dr Robert Malina, Hasselt University

10.30-10.45

Coffee break

10.45-12.30

Introduction to TEA (practice)

Prof dr Robert Malina, Hasselt University

12.30-13.30

Lunch Break

13.30-16.30

Student presentations

4 presenters + discussants

16.30-16.45

Coffee break

16.45-18.45

Student presentations

3 presenters + discussants

Day 3 - October 18th, 2024

Time

Event

09.30-10.30

Introduction to ROA (lecture)

Prof dr Tine Compernolle, University of Antwerp

10.30-10.45

Coffee break

10.45-12.30

Introduction to ROA (practice)

dr. Kris Welkenhuysen, Geological Survery of Belgium

12.30-13.30

Lunch Break

13.30-16.30

Student presentations

4 presenters + discussants

16.30-16.45

Coffee break

16.45-18.45

Student presentations

2 presenters + discussants

Target Audience and Format

PhD students working on TEA, LCA, or integrated analyses with regard to any topic of the low-carbon economy are invited to participate in the course by submitting an extended abstract. The number of students is limited to 20. Selection will be based on submitted abstracts.

The PhD expert course is a three-day event with a welcome, followed by methodological introduction sessions, and paper presentation sessions with discussants from the pool of participants and senior researchers providing feedback to ensure active participation and learning.

Venue and Practical Information

Hasselt University, City Campus, Martelarenlaan 42, 3500 Hasselt.

Sessions will take place in room number FR-1.01

Participation is free of charge and includes lunches.

Funding to cover only the accommodation costs is available for participants from the EURECA-PRO network, coming from outside Belgium. All participants will also receive a certificate of attendance.

Important dates and remarks

Submission deadline for extended abstracts: by September 22th, 2024


Notification of abstract acceptance and participation at the event will be sent by September 24th, 2024

The extended abstract should max. 1000 words of main body text. Supporting figures and tables (not more than three altogether) may be included. All extended abstracts must be uploaded in PDF format.

Abstract submission form

Contact

Prof dr Robert Malina - robert.malina@uhasselt.be

Prof dr Sebastien Lizin - sebastien.lizin@uhasselt.be

dr Sumit Maharjan - sumit.mahrajan@uhasselt.be

dr Alessandro Martulli - alessandro.martulli@uhasselt.be

Speakers

Tine Compernolle

Tine Compernolle is since September 2020 FED-tWIN researcher at the University of Antwerp | Department Engineering Management | Research group environmental economics (Assistant Professor, 50%) and the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences – the Geological Survey of Belgium (RBINS – GSB, senior researcher 50%). Tine has a PhD in Applied Economics (2012, UHasselt) and a master's in applied economics (2008, UHasselt). She worked as dr.-assistant at the UHasselt from 2013 until 2016. In 2016 she was granted an FWO post-doctoral fellowship for which she executed the research activities at the UAntwerp. Tine is an expert in techno-economic assessments, environmental life cycle assessments, and real options analysis applied to evaluate the decision to invest in green supply chains (bio-energy, carbon capture, utilization, and storage, deep geothermal energy) and to analyze trade-offs in associated environmental and economic impacts. Through several research stays abroad at the University of Tilburg and the University of York; she deepened her expertise in the real options theory to account for multiple sources of uncertainty and flexibility options.

Giovanna Sauve

Giovanna Sauve is a postdoctoral researcher at KU Leuven, Belgium, in the SAM group

(Sustainability Assessments of Material Life Cycles and Circular Economy) of Prof. Karel Van Acker. Energy engineer by background, she obtained her PhD at KU Leuven focusing on the environmental impact assessment of resource recovery through enhanced landfill mining (ELFM). In particular, her research aimed at including site-specific factors and parameter variability in the environmental impact assessment of landfills and ELFM valorization routes. She is currently a postdoctoral researcher at KU Leuven, and her research focuses on the life cycle assessment of emerging technologies and circular strategies, and development of approaches and tools for the sustainability assessment of

different systems. She is also business developer for the Flanders Make @KU Leuven core lab, where she works on research and its valorization for the manufacturing industry.

Robert Malina

Robert Malina is a Full Professor for Environmental Economics at Hasselt University and Director of the Centre for Environmental Sciences (CMK), a multidisciplinary institute with >200 researchers from a broad set of academic disciplines (environmental biology, epidemiology, zoology, toxicology, applied chemistry, nuclear engineering, environmental economics, environmental law). He is also a Research Affiliate in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

CMK research addresses challenges of high societal urgency that require analyses that span across the boundaries of different scientific domains and disciplines and necessitate fundamental as well as applied research. His research is focused on holistic economic assessments in the field of energy, transport, and the environment, such as, for example, the impact of climate change on ecosystems and the services they provide, the tension between economic growth and environmental sustainability; and the challenge to marry the need of the aviation sector to significantly reduce emissions with our desire to fly. One of his core areas of research for more than a decade now is sustainable aviation fuels, in particular with regard to assessments on their economic and environmental viability and with regard to designing methods to appropriately account for those fuels in international climate regulation. The work that he does aims to be a source of robust science-driven advice for governmental agencies and businesses, to help improve technological and environmental decision-making.