Alumni

Dr. Eva Bartekova

Thesis:
Multi-Problem Challenges for a Renewable Future: Empirical Studies on Competitive Disadvantages from Electricity Price Differentials and Mineral Supply Risk in an Open Economy World

Year: 2016

Promotor(s):
René Kemp and Thomas Ziesemer

Abstract:
The Paris Agreement is the first-ever universal globally binding treaty on climate change mitigation. As opposed to its predecessors, it advocates a decentralised bottom-up mechanism to emissions abatement, which should assure wider participation by both developing and developed countries. Yet at the same time it also brings about new challenges. This dissertation examines the coordination challenges arising within the decentralised climate change policy architecture, in a world with interconnected systems, heterogeneous national polices and priorities, and distorted markets. This is done using a multidisciplinary and mixed method approach, which allows analysing the problem of coordination from a more holistic perspective and drawing implications within a wider socio-economic, technological and geopolitical context. First, higher electricity prices for industrial consumers lead to a loss of international competitiveness on country level in terms of attracting foreign direct investment. These economic costs mainly arise from the uncoordinated implementation of environmental policies across countries. Second, inadequate coordination of policies beyond sectoral stovepipes have wide ranging implications on global supply chains. In particular, potential supply shortages of rare earths would largely disrupt the deployment of certain low-carbon technologies, such as electric vehicles. Third, the evidence shows that despite the similar objectives, the foci of rare earth strategies differ across regions. It is thus important to coordinate collective actions at multiple scales within countries, in order to accommodate national interests and domestic circumstances in face of global market distortions. Taken together, this dissertation argues for a three-dimensional coordination of bottom-up climate change mitigation processes: within national policies, across national policies and beyond sectoral policies. It thus proposes a multilevel and polycentric governance mechanism, advocating an integrated approach to low-carbon energy transition rather than focusing on energy-related greenhouse gas emissions in isolation.

Selected publications by Eva Bartekova


Articles (journal, professional, popular)
Bartekova, Eva & Thomas Ziesemer, 2019, `Impact of electricity prices on foreign direct investment: Evidence from the European Union, Applied Economics, 51
Kemp, René, Eva Bartekova & Serdar Turkeli, 2017, `The Innovation Trajectory of Eco-Cement in the Netherlands, International Economics and Economic Policy, 14, More information
McDowall, Will, Yong Geng, Beijia Huang, Eva Bartekova, Raimund Bleischwitz, Serdar Turkeli, René Kemp & Teresa Domenech, 2017, `Circular Economy Policies in China and Europe, Journal of Industrial Ecology, 21, More information
Kemp, René, Eva Bartekova & Serdar Turkeli, 2017, `The innovation trajectory of eco-cement in the Netherlands, International Economics and Economic Policy, 14, More information
Bartekova, Eva & René Kemp, 2016, `National strategies for securing a stable supply of rare earths in different world regions, Resources Policy, 49, More information


Book chapters
Bartekova, Eva, 2015, The Role of Rare Earth Supply Risk in Low-Carbon Technology Innovation, in: Ismar Borges de Lima, Walter Leal Filho (eds), Rare Earths Industry: Technological, Economic and Environmental Implications, Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands, More information


UNU-MERIT Working Papers
Bartekova, Eva & René Kemp, 2016, Critical raw material strategies in different world regions, UNU-MERIT Working Paper 2016-005
Bartekova, Eva & Thomas Ziesemer, 2015, Impact of electricity prices on foreign direct investment: Evidence from the European Union, UNU-MERIT Working Paper 2015-021
Bartekova, Eva, 2014, An introduction to the economics of rare earths, UNU-MERIT Working Paper 2014-043


Conference contributions
Bartekova, Eva, 2014, The Role of Rare Earths Supply Risk in Low Carbon Technologies Innovation, ERES 2014 - First European Rare Earth Resources Conference, 4-7 September 2014, Milos - Greece, More information


Theses
Bartekova, Eva, 2016, Multi-Problem Challenges for a Renewable Future: Empirical Studies on Competitive Disadvantages from Electricity Price Differentials and Mineral Supply Risk in an Open Economy World, PhD dissertation Maastricht University / United Nations University

UNU-MERIT