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Invitation to tender - JRC/SVQ/2016/C.6/5007/NC Study on generation of input to include land-use and biomass for energy into energy models Technical Specifications Index 1 BACKGROUND AND RATIONALE.................................................................................. 2 1.1 1.2 1.3 THE DIRECTORATE AND THE UNIT .........................................................................................2 POLICY BACKGROUND ..............................................................................................................2 RESEARCH CONTEXT..................................................................................................................3 2 AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY ....ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 3 EXPECTED RESULTS ........................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 4 APPROACH ..........................................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 5 TASKS DESCRIPTION .......................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 5 DELIVERABLES .................................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 6 CALENDAR OF DELIVERABLES AND RESULTSERROR! DEFINED. BOOKMARK NOT 7 COORDINATION AND MEETINGS WITH THE COMMISSION .................. ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 8 QUALITY ASSURANCE .....................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 9 DURATION ...........................................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 10 LANGUAGE ..........................................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 11 CONTENT, STRUCTURE AND GRAPHIC REQUIREMENTS OF THE FINAL DELIVERABLES ...........................................................ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. 11.1 11.2 11.3 Content ...................................................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined. Structure .................................................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined. Graphic requirements ................................................................ Error! Bookmark not defined. 1 1 BACKGROUND AND RATIONALE 1.1 THE DIRECTORATE AND THE UNIT The Economics of Climate Change, Energy and Transport (ECCET) Unit of the Directorate "Transport, Energy and Climate" of the European Commission's Joint Research Centre (DG JRC), analyses, among other issues, the economic aspects of climate change, both mitigation and adaptation. In particular, it has been developing climate mitigation scenarios both on EU and global scale. 1.2 POLICY BACKGROUND The Paris Agreement includes a long-term goal to put the world on track to limit global warming to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C. Regarding the agriculture, forestry and other land use sector, the Paris Agreement spells out that the contribution from land use and forests in reaching the long term climate mitigation objectives will be critical. In line with scientific findings reported by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in the fourth Assessment Report, the EU's objective, in the context of necessary reductions by developed countries as a group, is to reduce GHG emissions by 80-95% by 2050 compared to 1990. The Commission in its 2050 Low Carbon Economy Roadmap proposed concrete milestones to ensure the EU is on track to reduce these emissions by at least 80% domestically by 2050, with milestones of 40% and 60% reductions in 2030 and 2040. For 2020, the EU had agreed in 2007 on an economy wide and binding target of at least 20% GHG emission reductions, as well as a binding renewables target of 20% and an indicative target of 20% energy savings. Land use, however, was not included in either of these initiatives. The EU has set an ambitious economy-wide domestic target of at least 40% greenhouse gas emission reduction for 2030. The 2014 European Council conclusions also mandated the European Commission to put forward policy to include Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) into the EU's 2030 climate and energy framework. The European Council specifically acknowledged "the multiple objectives of the agriculture and land use sector, with their lower mitigation potential, and the need to ensure coherence between the EU's food security and climate change objectives". It invited the Commission "to examine the best means of encouraging the sustainable intensification of food production, while optimising the sector's contribution to greenhouse gas mitigation and sequestration, including through afforestation". 2 1.3 RESEARCH CONTEXT The Economics of Climate Change, Energy and Transport Unit (ECCET) of the Joint Research Centre (JRC) has accumulated over the years a considerable experience in the conceptual development, maintenance and exploitation of economic/energy models that can project energy consumption, air pollutants and GHG emissions, covering in particular detail sectors such as transport and energy supply on a global and EU scale. The JRC has contributed with quantitative modelling results for the preparation numerous policy initiatives, for instance The Paris Protocol – A blueprint for tackling global climate change beyond 2020, COM(2015) 81 final/2 Analysis of options to move beyond 20% greenhouse gas emission reductions and assessing the risk of carbon leakage, COM(2010) 265 final Limiting Global Climate Change to 2 degrees Celsius The way ahead for 2020 and beyond, COM(2007) 2 In the context of the outcome of COP21 and the upcoming analysis of 1.5 degree scenarios there is an increased need to analyse possible long-term solutions and scenarios which potentially involve a considerable amount of bioenergy. The increased utilisation of biomass for energy and wood products can lower emissions in other sectors through energy and material substitution. Enhancing the bio-economy can therefore contribute positively to climate mitigation. However, the increased use of biomass for the production of renewable energy and for material substitution shifts the accounting of emissions from the energy and others sectors to the land use sector, in particular to forest management as well as expansion of energy plantations potentially competing for land with carbon rich natural vegetation such as tropical forests. It is therefore of key importance that the use of biomass is appropriately accounted for in LULUCF. In addition, reaching, or getting close to, the ambitious 1.5 degree target will accordingly to the scenarios reviewed in the IPCC AR5 report almost certainly require negative emission technologies among which carbon storage through afforestation. In order to derive consistent mitigation scenarios, the modelling framework applied needs to be continuously updated and the capacity to better represent the interrelationship of energy, land use and agricultural policies has to be further improved. 2 AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY This study intends to improve the energy modelling and scenario analyses at the JRC by considering adequately cross-sectoral effects of bioenergy and land-use. These complex relationships need to be addressed with specialized quantitative tools and made available for the use in energy models. Bioenergy has been shown to be a potentially valuable, and maybe essential, option for long-run climate management. However, there is significant variation in bioenergy deployment results and uncertainty about the economic and social implications associated with large-scale deployment. 3 The objective of this study is to develop and provide a set of meta-models, reduced form models, emulators, or look-up tables allowing capturing the behaviour of the LULUCF sector(s) under different scenario assumptions. The use and future contribution of biomass for energy uses depends on many factors. The total availability (supply) and the price are a function of: Available land (sustainability criteria, population, development pattern,..) Food demand Food diet Carbon values Biodiversity protection Etc. The aim of the project is to provide the necessary information of the available biomass quantities and the corresponding prices and AFOLU emissions for a whole range of scenario assumptions. This output of the study will be implemented for the use within the JRC global and EU energy models. 5 EXPECTED RESULTS The main expected result is the generation of input for the energy models which allow simulating the reaction of land-use and agricultural sectors in a variety of different energy and climate scenarios. This input will reproduce the results as given by detailed modelling tools dealing with land-use, land-use change, agriculture and bioenergy. The study will contribute to the assessment of global as well as EU policies in the field of energy and climate policy. 6 APPROACH In order to further improve the modelling to assess quantitatively the interactions between energy and land-using sectors a specialised tool is necessary. Such tool or model needs to integrate the agricultural, bioenergy and forestry sectors so as to allowing and analysis on issues concerning land use competition between the major land-based production sectors. This tool or models have to be capable of providing insight on issues that are outside the energy sector but are vital for instance to achieving the required emissions reductions to meet the 2 degree target. These issues include: the availability and cost of biomass for energy and implications of large-scale energy demand for other land uses; the potential supply and location of biological carbon sinks; the emissions reductions required in other sectors (including non-CO2 greenhouse gases from agriculture); and the possible contribution of dietary or lifestyle changes. The information should also contain the emissions (CO2 and potentially other GHGs) related to land-use activities (agriculture, forestry). To this end the reference and historic emissions have to be defined and documented. 4 The methodology applied and the implementation on the side of the energy models will be checked for robustness. To this end test scenarios will be defined and run in parallel with the energy model including the "look-up tables" or emulator and with the land-use tool on the other hand. The tests will also look into dynamic effects and path dependencies. Regional disaggregation Disaggregated information on land-use has to be made available on country or regions level. In order to provide input for the global modelling ideally the regional disaggregation of the POLES model 67 regions could be matched. For the EU modelling all EU Member States plus neighbouring and accession countries should be available. Table 1: JRC-POLES model regional detail Europe CIS America Africa Middle East Asia Pacific EU28 Russia Argentina Egypt Iran China Australia Iceland Ukraine Brazil Saudi Arabia India Japan Turkey Indonesia Korea (Rep.) Norway Switzerland Other Balkans Other CIS Canada Chile Algeria & Libya Morocco & Tunisia Mediterranean Middle-East USA South Africa Rest Gulf Rest Central America Rest SubSaharan Africa Mexico Malaysia Thailand Vietnam Rest South Asia New Zealand Rest Pacific Rest SouthEast Asia Rest South America 5 Figure 1: JRC-POLES model regional detail map The time horizon The time horizon for the analyses carried out at the JRC is 2050. For some analysis on climate mitigation also scenarios are run until 2100. The information to be fed into the energy sector models therefore should comprise information covering the time horizon of at least 2050. If 2100 cannot be fully covered by the land-use model, indications should be given how to deal with landuse beyond the time horizon of the land-use model. 7 TASKS DESCRIPTION The contractor will perform the following tasks: Task A. Assessment of viable ways to incorporate information from the land-use model into energy models. Duration: 3 months The aim of this task is to: 6 analyse the dimensions and variables that need to be covered as to inform the energy model on the reaction of the land-use model. propose, as a result of this analysis, a specific methodology to generate the meta-model or information to embed land-use, forestry and agriculture related effects into the energy models. Completion of Task A should be performed following the requirements described in Section 2 (Aims and objectives), 3 (Expected results) and 4 (Approach). Task B. Generation of meta information of AFOLU/LULUCF and biomass Duration: 8 months The aim of this task is to generate the necessary input to simulate the reaction of the land-use and agriculture sectors to energy and climate policy scenarios using a emulator or look-up tables (applying the methodology defined under task A). This information and input should cover the necessary dimensions in terms of relevant variables and an adequate space of different scenario definitions. The choice will be made in cooperation with JRC ECCET and based on the analysis carried out under Task A. Completion of Task B should be done following the requirements described in Section 2 (Aims and objectives), 3 (Expected results) and 4 (Approach). Task C. Evaluation of robustness Duration: 4 months With a set of meta-information to be included in the energy models tests will be run in order to evaluate the robustness of the approach. This includes parallel runs with the energy and the landuse model so as to check the proper functioning of the transferred information and the adequate reproduction of the effects by the reduced form input. The dimension covered by the checks should include: dynamic effects (paths), time dimension, regional/spatial heterogeneity, reaction to disruptive "shocks" (prices, quantities) 12 DELIVERABLES The following deliverables are expected from the study: Deliverable A. Inception report covering proposed methodology The Contractor should deliver a short report describing the intended work to be carried out under this study and the methodology to be applied. The final version of the reports should take into consideration the proposals and comments by the IPTS team. Deliverable B1. Input data/reduced form to be included in the energy models. Deliverable B2. Report documenting the input provided. Deliverable C. Report on robustness 7 Deliverable D. Final report (summary) The deliverable will briefly summarise the methodology as well as the results of this study. 13 CALENDAR OF DELIVERABLES AND RESULTS The following table summarises when the tentative time schedule for the different activities and deliverables: Month 0 End of month 3 Contract signature Deliverable A End of month 12 Deliverables B1 and B2 End of month 16 Deliverable C End of month 18 Deliverable D In case the JRC requests changes, the new version of the deliverable should be submitted within a maximum of one month after the formal request from the Commission. 20 COORDINATION AND MEETINGS WITH THE COMMISSION The contractor will be required to carry out the service in close co-operation with JRC. There will be the following one day meetings at JRC premises in Seville or by phone or video conference: First meeting, for the validation of Deliverables A, within 3 month from the start of the contract. Second meeting, for the validation of Deliverables B1 and B2, within 12 month from the start of the contract. The final results and deliverables C and D will be presented. The meeting will take place within 16 months from the start of the contract. The contractor and JRC can have also bilateral technical meetings, if required as the project evolves, by telephone or videoconference.. 21 QUALITY ASSURANCE The work delivered by the contractor must be of such quality that it can be used directly to support existing research and policy making. Therefore, the contractor should establish robust means to 8 assure the validity and comparability of information collected and the quality of its analysis and reporting. In particular, the Senior Researcher nominated by the Contractor in the proposal will be in charge of the scientific quality assurance tasks. Before final acceptance, all reports will be completed, adapted and corrected by this Senior Researcher, who will fully take into account the comments, suggestions and additional written comments provided by the IPTS. 22 DURATION The contractor shall start working immediately after the signature of the contract. The execution of the tasks may in any case not start before the contract has been signed. The service will be delivered over a period of up to 18 months since the date of the last signature of the contract, including the time for the JRC to comment the interim deliverables and the contractor to implement the suggested amendments. The time needed for possible comments and amendments to the final deliverables (Deliverables C and D) is not included. 23 LANGUAGE The language of all deliverables meetings, presentations, and exchanges will be English. It is expected that the written text in the deliverables is of high standard scientific language, ideas are expressed in a clear and logically structured way. The text of all deliverables will be strictly assessed according to these criteria in the review process. 24 CONTENT, STRUCTURE AND GRAPHIC REQUIREMENTS OF THE FINAL DELIVERABLES All studies produced for the European Commission and Executive Agencies shall conform to the corporate visual identity of the European Commission by applying the graphic rules set out in the European Commission's Visual Identity Manual, including its logo. The Commission is committed to making online information as accessible as possible to the largest possible number of users including those with visual, auditory, cognitive or physical disabilities, and those not having the latest technologies. The Commission supports the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 of the W3C. For full details on Commission policy on accessibility for information providers, see: http://ec.europa.eu/ipg/standards/accessibility/index_en.htm Pdf versions of studies destined for online publication should respect W3C guidelines for accessible pdf documents. See: http://www.w3.org/WAI/ 9 24.1 CONTENT Final study report (Deliverable D) The final study report shall include: - an abstract of no more than 200 words and an executive summary of maximum 6 pages, both in English; - the following standard disclaimer: “The information and views set out in this report are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official opinion of the Commission. The Commission does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this study. Neither the Commission nor any person acting on the Commission’s behalf may be held responsible for the use which may be made of the information contained therein.” - specific identifiers which shall be incorporated on the cover page provided by the Contracting Authority. Publishable executive summary The publishable executive summary shall be provided in both English and shall include: - the following standard disclaimer: “The information and views set out in this report are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official opinion of the Commission. The Commission does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this study. Neither the Commission nor any person acting on the Commission’s behalf may be held responsible for the use which may be made of the information contained therein.” - specific identifiers which shall be incorporated on the cover page provided by the Contracting Authority. 24.2 STRUCTURE The final study report (Deliverable D) must follow the structure agreed at the first meeting. 24.3 GRAPHIC REQUIREMENTS For graphic requirements please refer to the template provided in the annex 1. The cover page shall be filled in by the contractor in accordance with the instructions provided in the template. For further details you may also contact [email protected]. 10