Energy Efficiency in Urban Context: An Overview of European-Funded Projects with the Analysis of an ELENA Case Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. European Funds for Energy Efficiency
2.1.1. Funding Opportunities for Energy Efficiency Projects: An Overview
- the Cohesion Fund, which supports the realization of projects in the trans-European transport networks and in the field of the environment, where projects that support energy efficiency and use of renewable energy are financed. Referring to the urban environment, it can be relevant for its contribution to inter-modality and to strengthening public transport. After the 2014–2020 period, the Fund was renewed for the 2020–2027 period and it has maintained the focus on mobility and related infrastructures [32];
- the Connecting Europe Facility, linked to the above-mentioned Cohesion Fund, interests the urban environment since it finances infrastructures for transport, energy and telecommunications. Even if the project size is expected to be much larger than those developed at a local level, their realization directly impacts on urban performances. The facility can also provide guarantees and project bonds, trying to foster the use of private funds for the development of the projects. The program started in 2014, and financed both studies and works [33];
- European Regional Development Fund—ERDF deserves to be mentioned since it is explicitly focused on the local development of EU areas (regions, in this specific case), thus including small size projects to be developed in the cities. Again, among key priority areas of the Fund we can find the “development of a low carbon economy” [34];
- Currently, the main source to finance research and innovation projects is Horizon Europe, which followed the previous Horizon 2020 program. Horizons came after the development of 7 Framework programs (begun in 1984). Projects developed using funds dedicated to applied research are summarized in the following paragraph [35].
2.1.2. Two Examples of Technical Assistance Funds
- Energy efficiency, where we can find “traditional” ELENA projects (renovation of public buildings, lighting, district heating, etc.);
- Sustainable residential, dedicated to private individuals and homeowner associations for renovations and renewable energy projects in residential buildings (including social housing), which is an interesting novelty for the fund and might allow for a wider set of buildings;
- Urban transport and mobility.
2.1.3. Funding Opportunities for Projects with Innovation and Research Scopes
2.2. The European Local Energy Assistance (ELENA) Fund: A Case Study
- Institutional EU websites;
- Institutional websites of the actors and stakeholders involved in the project analyzed as the case study;
- Web articles and media publications related to the project;
- Brochures, project presentations;
- Tenders’ documentation (References for some of the materials cannot be made explicit, in order to keep the case study anonymous);
- Semi-structured interviews with relevant actors involved in the project (managers, consultants, politicians).
- The four main public bodies (two municipalities and two provinces) formed the governance of the initiative. It is worth mentioning that the project was developed before the reform that changed the role of Italian provinces in 2014: during the development, provinces still had a quite relevant local role;
- The other group of participants was, instead, made up by small municipalities scattered on the territory. For reasons of efficiency, they were asked to delegate the four major entities to develop the proposal. The number of municipalities involved in the program was high (about 40) with a limited dimension.
3. Results
3.1. Funds for Energy Efficiency: From a Broad Approach to the Relevance for the Urban Context
- Research and innovation projects funded by framework programs and Horizons initiatives, which contributed to the development of pilot projects;
- The Energy Efficiency Fund for the development of investment projects;
- The Energy Efficiency Fund and the European Local Energy Assistance Fund for Technical Assistance projects.
3.1.1. Research and Innovation Projects
3.1.2. The EEEF for the Development of Investment Projects
3.1.3. Technical Assistance Projects
3.2. ELENA Case Study—Findings
- 1.
- Preparation phase
- Information needs. During the preparation of the submission, a huge amount of information and assessments were required by EIB: this procedure seems necessary to finance only valuable projects, but demands an expensive preparation process that in some cases is borne by the potential beneficiary, but in other cases calls for a pre-technical expenditure finance (as for our case study). Moreover, in recent years, experts interviewed registered an increasing need for detailed information to present a successful proposal, and this decreases the probability for less endowed potential beneficiaries to be funded. One of the experts also declared that evaluation techniques used to estimate the consumption baseline for the investment program are often not coherent with the following private evaluation carried out by the Energy Service Companies or other investors. In other words, the investment value estimated during the preparation phase might be meaningless in the realization phase.
- Coordination. To reach a sufficiently high investment amount, the proposal required to collect investments needs to come from a huge number of medium and small municipalities (around 40), together with four main local authorities (two provinces and two municipalities). This activity brings with it a lot of coordination costs, including the overcoming of political differences among administrators. In the particular case of interest, four major entities also had to choose the final beneficiary of the funding.
- Time. The preparation phase lasted for several months: on the one hand, this was justified by the need for data collection and to provide sufficient answers for the EIB selection process; on the other hand, this is due to a huge effort in the coordination of municipalities, which exposes the project to a political failure in case of lengthening.
- 2.
- ELENA implementation phase
- Political time inconsistency (as defined in [49]). Once the beneficiary received the funding, other problems occurred. Coordination efforts in the preparation phase were mostly wasted, as official commitments signed during the preparation phase were considered not binding by the local authorities: this interpretation was also adopted by one of the main municipalities involved. As a consequence, the municipalities involved in the preparation phase were not those included in the final investment. The engagement of new municipalities was an unexpected activity (i.e., an unexpected cost) to be borne. Moreover, a change in the Italian legislation heavily weakened the political role of provinces, with a negative impact of the coordination power of the main beneficiary.
- Contracts awareness. Besides political inconsistencies of the participants, in some relevant cases their scarce knowledge of existing contracts and funding procedures caused an additional reduction of the investment amount. Municipalities that previously declared their commitment in joining the ELENA investment program omitted the existence of management and maintenance contracts signed for the targets of intervention. The presence of incumbent contracts determined the exit of relevant municipalities from the project.
- Tenders dimension. Few operators on the market had the capacity to handle the investment amount: this, on the one hand, reduced competition but, on the other, guaranteed the participation of qualified operators. As often happens, tender procedures were slowed down by appeals.
- Financing. Participants to tenders relied on standard financing. There was the possibility of organizing facilitated funding schemes relying on European revolving funds, but it was not possible to find the collaboration of local operators (e.g., bank) for this purpose.
- Contracts. Contracting at central level lowers administrative costs, but it also lowers the customization of the intervention and this caused unsatisfactory realizations. Talking to local politicians, then, it was possible to identify some investment distortions that meant that the renewal was not fully satisfactory for the users. Energy Performance contracts also limited the set of possible interventions. Binding contracts impeded the realization of other investments during the time of contracting (e.g., anti-seismic adaptation). After the ELENA assistance, municipalities are left alone with the awarded operator and this might lead to an unbalanced relationship between the two, since the municipality sometimes has few competences to discuss with the operator (whose contract lasts for 10–15 years). Lack of technical competences also impacted the level of awareness in the adhesion process; similarly, in some cases it impeded the political debate, thus helping in keeping the commitment (too hard to oppose).
- Distortions on evaluation parameters. The leverage effect—calculated by dividing the total investment value over the technical expenditure—was considered the only relevant factor in the evaluation of the investment program, while investments should be evaluated on the basis of their cost-effectiveness. This also determined a loss in investment efficiency, as there is no interest from the beneficiary in gaining high discounts in the tender procedure.
- Time (and its consequences). The ELENA funds covered 3 + 1 years of project, but private financers funded further years of work that almost doubled the initial project length. Municipalities needed to wait for a long time to see the investments they needed. Moreover, their budget constraints were considerably relaxed during the project (from the Stability Pact to the balance budget) and this meant that the interest of the municipalities in the project was reduced considerably as other opportunities became available.
- Absence of monitoring. The ELENA scheme does not include a monitoring period: this problem is connected to the presence of distorted evaluation parameters (only investment amount, no checks on CO2 savings).
4. Discussion and Conclusions
- -
- an excess of barriers generated by the procedure for obtaining the funding, such as difficulties in understanding the technological processes, or
- -
- other financing opportunities already present on the market and preferred by operators, that avoid the European due diligence process.
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
ELENA—On-Going Project Factsheets as of 04 March 2022 (Information Available at Project Start) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Title/Beneficiary | Country | Signature | Title/Beneficiary | Country | Signature | ||
1 | REFER-CDR—Renewable Energy For Emission Reduction in Central Denmark Region | Denmark | 1 May 2017 | 39 | Helsinki Open Charging System (HOCS) | Finland | 19 December 2019 |
2 | PROTHEUS—Smart Grid Project for Paks | Hungary | 8 May 2017 | 40 | Energy Efficiency for Lithuanian Public Buildings and Street Lighting (LITGOVEN) | Lithuania | 20 December 2019 |
3 | SCMC—Smart City Mobility Concept | The Netherlands | 12 July 2017 | 41 | ING REF Energy Efficiency in Private Buildings (ING REF EEPB) | The Netherlands | 20 December 2019 |
4 | CHESHIRE EAST ENERGY PROGRAMME | United Kingdom | 24 August 2017 | 42 | Local Authority Public Lighting Energy Efficiency Project (RMO) | Ireland | 23 December 2019 |
5 | DEPO KLAIPEDA—Development of electric public transport for new opportunities | Lithuania | 1 September 2017 | 43 | EKO TEAM | Poland | 31 March 2020 |
6 | TEBB—Transition to Electric Buses and Boats in Movia | Denmark | 30 October 2017 | 44 | Riksenergy | Sweden | 3 April 2020 |
7 | RePubLEEc—Zagreb Energy Efficient Reconstruction of Public Lighting | Croatia | 6 December 2017 | 45 | Lille DSP Rénovation énergétique | France | 20 July 2020 |
8 | GEN-IUS—GENova—Innovative Urban Sustainability | Italy | 6 December 2017 | 46 | CMH—Consorci Metropolità de l’Habitatge | Spain | 30 July 2020 |
9 | CODESO—Technical support for the implementation of sustainable energy measures in buildings owned by the Regional Government of the Basque Country | Spain | 21 December 2017 | 47 | EB&A Platform CMZRB | Czech Republic | 30 July 2020 |
10 | D6EEPB—District 6 Energy Efficiency for Public Buildings | Romania | 16 February 2018 | 48 | Tilburg Sustainable Real Estate (TSRE) | The Netherlands | 3 September 2020 |
11 | INDDHEAT—Improving renewable energy and energy efficiency in North Denmark District HEATing | Denmark | 28 June 2018 | 49 | Energy Region Kosice (ENREKO) | Slovakia | 23 September 2020 |
12 | RHEIP—The Capital Region Energy Investment Programme | Denmark | 9 July 2018 | 50 | Sustainable Homes and Sustainable Heat in Zuid-Holland | The Netherlands | 30 September 2020 |
13 | BEM—Efficiency for Berlin Properties | Germany | 19 July 2018 | 51 | Heka’s Elena energy efficiency activities (HELENA) | Finland | 29 September 2020 |
14 | RenoWatt | Belgium | 31 August 2018 | 52 | Irish Water Energy Efficiency Programme | Ireland | 14 October 2020 |
15 | BIT System for Pomorskie Region | Poland | 29 October 2018 | 53 | Klagenfurt Electric Bus Investment Project (KEBIP) | Austria | 11 November 2020 |
16 | SWEU—South West Energy Unit | United Kingdom | 13 November 2018 | 54 | Jelgava Residential Energy Efficiency (JNIP-EE) | Latvia | 26 November 2020 |
17 | ASTER—Access to Sustainability for Tenants through Energy-effective Retrofit | Belgium | 26 November 2018 | 55 | Avedore Green City (AGC) | Denmark | 26 November 2020 |
18 | Frederikshavn Housing Association—Energy efficiency in social housing | Denmark | 11 December 2018 | 56 | Comprehensive Renovation Programme in Governmental Buildings in the Czech Republic (CRPiGB-CR) | Czech Republic | 16 December 2020 |
19 | GROWS—Green Revolution of Wealth in Salento | Italy | 17 December 2018 | 57 | INTegrated sustainable enERgy ACTions and projects in Crete (INTERACT in Crete) | Greece | 16 December 2020 |
20 | GIEEP—Grant for Implementation of Energy Efficiency Projects | Latvia | 17 December 2018 | 58 | Sustainable mobility programme in Slovenia (SMP Slovenia) | Slovenia | 18 December 2020 |
21 | KaposGrid—KaposGrid Smart Urban Energy Project | Hungary | 27 December 2018 | 59 | Eemland model: Large-scale Zero-energy Renovations | The Netherlands | 21 December 2020 |
22 | FLESPI—Flemish Energy Saving Programme Initiative | Belgium | 27 December 2018 | 60 | Speed UP Renovation through Accompaniment (SUPRA) | Belgium | 5 March 2021 |
23 | ENERGY EFFICIENCY by GETIN | Poland | 27 February 2019 | 61 | Sustainable Energy—East Slovenia (SE-ES) | Slovenia | 25 March 2021 |
24 | PL-Alior Energy Efficiency Loans in buildings | Poland | 27 February 2019 | 62 | Regional Programme of energy efficiency measures and incorporation of renewable energy sources in Navarra residential building stock and their installations (PRIMAVERA) | Spain | 26 April 2021 |
25 | EEFFRB—Energy Efficiency Finance Facility for Residential Buildings | Poland | 26 March 2019 | 63 | Interdépendances—Consolider l’accompagnement des rénovations énergétiques de l’Ouest de la Normandie | France | 11 June 2021 |
26 | Sustainability loans for citizens in Limburg | The Netherlands | 29 March 2019 | 64 | PVMax—Maximal PhotoVoltaic for Croatia | Croatia | 29 June 2021 |
27 | BME—Développement d’un service clé en main de la rénovation énergétique intégrant le tiers-financement sur Bordeaux Métropole | France | 28 May 2019 | 65 | Rénovation Copropriétés Grand Est | France | 28 July 2021 |
28 | Improving Energy Efficiency in the Region of South Aegean | Greece | 4 June 2019 | 66 | Top Condomini | Italy | 13 September 2021 |
29 | OKTAVE | France | 28 June 2019 | 67 | Grenoble Alpes Metropole—Residential Energy Efficiency (GAM-REE) | France | 1 October 2021 |
30 | Ma Rénov Bordeaux Métropole | France | 5 July 2019 | 68 | Fountain Fuel Hydrogen Refuelling Stations | The Netherlands | 10 November 2021 |
31 | Parteon renovation and new buildings Programme (PARTEON) | France | 19 August 2019 | 69 | Copenhagen Energy Focused Urban Renewal (CEFUR) | Denmark | 3 December 2021 |
32 | Smart Central Bohemian Region (Smart CEBOREG) | Czech Republic | 18 September 2019 | 70 | South Muntenia Energy Efficiency for Public Buildings Investment Programme | Romania | 17 December 2021 |
33 | The National Integrator of Investment Processes in District Heating Companies in Poland (KAPE) | Poland | 27 September 2019 | 71 | Integrated Transports Management System in Padova | Italy | 23 December 2021 |
34 | FOR CASTRO PRETORIO SMART AND EFFICIENT—4CPS&E | Italy | 30 September 2019 | 72 | Prague Energy (PENERGY) | Czech Republic | 20 January 2022 |
35 | Sustainable Energy HBOR (SE HBOR) | Croatia | 3 October 2019 | 73 | Centre-Val de Loire Energies | France | 27 January 2022 |
36 | EEFFCB—Energy Efficiency Finance Facility for Commercial Buildings | Poland | 6 December 2019 | 74 | BOS Bank for increase Energy Efficiency in Poland (BOS4EE) | Poland | 28 February 2022 |
37 | Service Public Intégré de Rénovation Energétique Occitanie (SPIRE Occitanie) | France | 11 December 2019 | 75 | TRANSITION ENERGÉTIQUE DU PATRIMOINE PUBLIC D’IPARRALDE (TEPPI) | France | 16 March 2022 |
38 | Belfius Energy Project development unit (Belfius) | Belgium | 16 December 2019 |
Appendix B
ELENA—Completed Project Factsheets as of 04 April 2022 (Information Available at Completed Date) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Title/Beneficiary | Country | Completed | Title/Beneficiary | Country | Completed | ||
Date | Date | ||||||
1 | Purmerend—District Heating 2.0 at Stadsverwarming Purmerend | The Netherlands | 14 February 2014 | 31 | InEECo—Energy Performance and Energy Supply Contracting in public buildings (MEPCI) | Germany | 6 May 2019 |
2 | MADEV—Madrid Electrical Vehicles | Spain | 7 April 2014 | 32 | SOMACYL—Castilla y Léon Energy Efficiency project | Spain | 24 July 2019 |
3 | REDIBA—Renewable and Energy Efficiency in Diputació de Barcelona | Spain | 13 March 2015 | 33 | Progetto 3L—Less energy, Less cost, Less impact | Italy | 9 August 2019 |
4 | DAFNI—Development of smart-grid infrastructure in autonomous island grids of the Aegean | Greece | 31 August 2015 | 34 | GREENER-EX—Global Roadmap for Energy Efficiency and New Energy Resources in Extremadura | Spain | 23 August 2019 |
5 | ELENA-Modena | Italy | 16 November 2015 | 35 | SEPR—Sustainable Energy in Prešov Region | Slovakia | 23 August 2019 |
6 | LONDON DE—Decentralised Energy London | United Kingdom | 8 December 2015 | 36 | RE:FIT Wales | United Kingdom | 14 November 2019 |
7 | Green Net | The Netherlands | 16 December 2015 | 37 | FABER—Funding Action in Bergamo for Emission Reduction | Italy | 28 November 2019 |
8 | RE:FIT | United Kingdom | 18 December 2015 | 38 | AA PLUS—Energy Renovation of the Buildings of Aarhus Municipality | Denmark | 2 December 2019 |
9 | CPE-ECOLES—Contrats de performance énegétique des écoles de la ville de Paris | France | 22 December 2015 | 39 | Manchester LCDU—Greater Manchester Low Carbon Delivery Unit | United Kingdom | 10 February 2020 |
10 | Provincia de Milano—Energy efficiency Milan Covenant of Mayors | Italy | 29 December 2015 | 40 | ME-L—Municipal Efficiency—Light | Italy | 24 February 2020 |
11 | REEEZ—Renewable energy and energy efficiency in Zealand | Denmark | 26 January 2016 | 41 | EERR-VIG—Energy Efficient Reconstruction and Refurbishment of hospitals of VINZENZ Group | Austria | 30 April 2020 |
12 | Chieti towards 2020 | Italy | 3 October 2016 | 42 | Erasmus—Towards a Sustainable 2020 Campus | The Netherlands | 13 July 2020 |
13 | Birmingham Energy Savers Pathfinder | United Kingdom | 25 October 2016 | 43 | Rotterdam-Leiden Heat Infrastructure | The Netherlands | 17 September 2020 |
14 | Electrobus—Energy Efficient Bus Network for Barcelona | Spain | 9 March 2017 | 44 | Rotterdam Renovation Fund | The Netherlands | 30 October 2020 |
15 | SPIS—Sparvagnar i Skane (Tramways in Skane) | Sweden | 4 April 2017 | 45 | AMICA-E | Italy | 30 October 2020 |
16 | CEICAD—Common Energy Investment Programme in the Capital Region of Denmark | Denmark | 7 April 2017 | 46 | PM4PM—Preparation and Mobilisation of Financing for Sustainable Energy Investments in Primorska Region Municipalities | Slovenia | 1 December 2020 |
17 | BRITE—Bristol Retrofitting—Innovative Technology for Everyone | United Kingdom | 2 June 2017 | 47 | EE Bratislava—Energy Efficiency Programme for Buildings and Facilities of Bratislava | Slovakia | 5 January 2021 |
18 | Aarhus LRT—Aarhus Light Rail Transit project | Denmark | 12 June 2017 | 48 | HELLO—High-volume ELectric VehicLe PrOcurement | Germany | 12 March 2021 |
19 | EP Southern Denmark—Energy Programme Southern Denmark | Denmark | 12 June 2017 | 49 | UEFA—European Union ELENA Foggia Facility Assistance | Italy | 29 April 2021 |
20 | ZEB-SN—The Zero Emission Buses in the Netherlands | The Netherlands | 15 June 2017 | 50 | ARTEE—Expérimentation du Tiers-financement en Nouvelle-aquitaine | France | 21 July 2021 |
21 | EOL—Energetska obnova Ljubljane—Energy retrofit programme of public buildings in Ljubljana | Slovenia | 3 July 2017 | 51 | TIPP—Sustainable Tipperary | Ireland | 22 July 2021 |
22 | CEDEPI—Central Denmark Energy Planning and Investment | Denmark | 17 October 2017 | 52 | Epirus—Efficient Eco-friendly Transportation, Public Lighting and Buildings in the Region of Epirus | Greece | 27 July 2021 |
23 | Vila Nova de Gaia Sustainable Energy Programme | Portugal | 21 December 2017 | 53 | Warmtenet Noordwest | The Netherlands | 5 August 2021 |
24 | VAMOS—Vert.s une Aide à la Maîtrise de l’Ouvrage Sociale | Belgium | 10 January 2018 | 54 | Lower Energy Use Via an Extraordinary Network (LEUVEN) | Belgium | 25 October 2021 |
25 | FUENSANTA (ARGEM) | Spain | 13 March 2018 | 55 | Energy Accelerator (The Accelerator) | United Kingdom | 8 November 2021 |
26 | RE:NEW | United Kingdom | 3 July 2018 | 56 | EEEF—European Energy Efficiency Fund | Luxembourg | 9 December 2021 |
27 | ECO AP—Programma de Efficiencia Energetica na Administracao Publica | Portugal | 21 September 2018 | 57 | GCC—Gothenburg Cable Car | Sweden | 1 November 2021 |
28 | PICARDIE PASS RENOVATION | France | 17 December 2018 | 58 | GovDER—Government Deep Energy Renovation | Slovenia | 18 March 2022 |
29 | Newlight | Croatia | 21 December 2018 | 59 | ECORENOV METROPOLE DE LYON | France | 10 March 2022 |
30 | PROSPER—Province of Savona Pact for Energy Efficiency and Renewables | Italy | 3 April 2019 | 60 | EP OVERIJSSEL—Energy Project in Large Cities in Overijssel | The Netherlands | 21 February 2022 |
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Country | Beneficiary | Title/Typology | Investment (M€) | EEEF Effort (M€) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | France | City of Orleans | Combined heat and power (CHP) plant | 36.0 | 5.1 |
2 | France | City of Rennes | Combined heat and power facility | 47.6 | 7.3 |
3 | Germany | Jewush Museum Berlin Foundation | Energy efficiency measures | 1.4 | 0.9 |
4 | Germany | University of Applied Sciences Munich | Optimization of the heating, lighting, metering, building management and pumping systems, as well as the installation of a 49.5 kW combined heat and power (CHP) plant | 1.1 | 0.6 |
5 | Italy | Illuminated Cities | Street lighting | 20 | 16 |
6 | Italy | Smart Hospitals and Universities | A portfolio of investments in public hospitals and universities distributed across Italy (delated) | 22 | 7 |
7 | Italy | University Hospital S. Orsola Malpighi | Improve the energy efficiency of the entire fluid production and distribution system and reduce energy consumption | 41 | 31.8 |
8 | Netherlands | City of Venlo | Energy Efficiency/street lighting | 8.6 | 8.5 |
9 | Portugal | CIMAC | Street lighting | 16.6 | 12.1 |
10 | Portugal | Wattosun | Renewable energy/PV) | 10 | 5.1 |
11 | Portugal | Vila do Conde | Street lighting | 7.7 | 5.1 |
12 | Romania | Banca Transilvania | Energy efficiency/renewable energy/clean urban transport | 25 | 25 |
13 | Lithuania | Dancer Mobility | Clean urban transport | 5 | 4 |
14 | Spain | Universidad Politécnica de Madrid | Energy Efficiency/building retrofit | 2.5 | 2.5 |
15 | Spain | Municipality of Santander | Street lighting | 9.2 | 9.2 |
16 | United Kingdom | Ore Valley Housing Association | Energy efficiency/renewable energy | 4.3 | 2.2 |
Mature | France | Bolloré | Car-sharing services for electric cars | 30 | 30 |
Mature | France | SPL-Région Rhone-Alpes | Energy Efficiency/building retrofit | 25 | 5 |
Country | Beneficiary | € |
---|---|---|
Italy | Ferrara Province | 389,500 |
Spain | City of Gijon | 400,000 |
Italy | Italian Ministry of Defense | 340,000 |
Lithuania | Kaunas District Municipality | 180,000 |
Italy | Autonomous Province of Bolzano | 400,000 |
Lithuania | Ukmerg District Municipality | 160,000 |
Lithuania | Silute District Municipality | 195,000 |
Lithuania | Klaip da University Hospital | 195,000 |
Program | Short Name | n. of Projects | First Project Start | Last Project End |
---|---|---|---|---|
ENG-ENALT 2C—Programme (EEC) of demonstration projects relating to the exploitation of alternative energy sources and to energy saving and the substitution of hydrocarbons, 1983–1985 | ENG-ENALT 2C | 1 | 1983 | 1987 |
European cooperation in the field of scientific and technical research (COST), 1971- | IC-COST | 1 | 1987 | 1990 |
Thermie program, 1990–1994 | ENG-THERMIE 1 | 7 | 1990 | 1998 |
SAVE I program (1991–1995) | ENG-SAVE 1 | 22 | 1991 | 1995 |
Third Framework Program | FP3 | 2 | 1994 | 1996 |
SAVE II program (1996–2000) | ENG-SAVE 2 | 9 | 1996 | 2000 |
LIFE program | ENV-LIFE 2 | 2 | 1996 | 1999 |
Fourth Framework Program | FP4 | 5 | 1996 | 2000 |
Fifth Framework Program | FP5 | 4 | 2000 | 2006 |
Sixth Framework Program—Sustainable development, global change and Ecosystems | FO6-SUSTDEV | 4 | 2005 | 2012 |
Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Program | CIP | 9 | 2008 | 2016 |
Seventh Framework Program | FP7 | 55 | 2010 | 2019 |
Horizon 2020 | H2020 | 211 | 2014 | 2026 |
N. | Role | Date | Transcription (Pages) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Project implementation unit—project manager | 13 September2019 | 9 |
2 | External consultant—financial advisor | 31 October 2019 | 10 |
3 | Municipality | 12 November 2019 | 3.5 |
4 | External consultant—financial advisor | 13 November 2019 | 3 |
5 | Initial promoter | 18 November 2019 | 2.5 |
6 | Municipality | 14 February 2020 | 5 |
7 | External consultant—financial expert | 14 February 2020 | 15 |
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Bertolini, M. Energy Efficiency in Urban Context: An Overview of European-Funded Projects with the Analysis of an ELENA Case Study. Sustainability 2022, 14, 10574. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710574
Bertolini M. Energy Efficiency in Urban Context: An Overview of European-Funded Projects with the Analysis of an ELENA Case Study. Sustainability. 2022; 14(17):10574. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710574
Chicago/Turabian StyleBertolini, Marina. 2022. "Energy Efficiency in Urban Context: An Overview of European-Funded Projects with the Analysis of an ELENA Case Study" Sustainability 14, no. 17: 10574. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710574
APA StyleBertolini, M. (2022). Energy Efficiency in Urban Context: An Overview of European-Funded Projects with the Analysis of an ELENA Case Study. Sustainability, 14(17), 10574. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710574