Brief
An inclusive Social Climate Fund for the just transition
“Vulnerable citizens and families are more likely to have the least resources to face climate change, both financially, to move away from fossil-fuels, and politically, to have their voices heard in policymaking. The Social Climate Fund is an unprecedented opportunity to fill this financial and political gap.”
The just transition will not be just if it is not inclusive. Currently, one in five Europeans are at risk of poverty or social exclusion. “To leave no one behind” implies taking extra care of the most vulnerable groups in the energy transition. Vulnerable citizens and families are more likely to have the least resources to face climate change, both financially, to move away from fossil-fuels, and politically, to have their voices heard in policymaking. The Social Climate Fund (SCF) proposed by the European Commission in July 2021 is an unprecedented opportunity to fill this financial and political gap. The SCF has the potential to support access to essential energy and mobility services for vulnerable citizens across the European Union (EU). It would serve as a complement to the Just Transition Mechanism that primarily is dedicated to mitigating social and employment impacts in coal dependent regions.
However, the current proposal offers insufficient guarantees for fulfilling expectations on social justice, decarbonisation, and more inclusive governance. Building on our previous brief on the Social Climate Fund that highlighted the need to decouple the SCF from the “ETS2” (the proposed Emissions Trading System on heating and road transportation), this brief outlines the key conditions to ensure that the SCF delivers a just transition. First, we present the main features of the Commission’s SCF proposal, and thereafter we turn to highlight why social acceptability should be the guiding principle of the SCF. This implies: (1) leaving enough room for social compensation targeted at the most vulnerable in the transition, which will be indispensable in some national contexts; (2) financing salient decarbonisation programmes targeted to the most vulnerable; and (3) implementing inclusive consultation, decision-making, and monitoring processes in the governance of the fund.
Recommended citation:
Defard C. & Thalberg K. 2022. “An inclusive Social Climate Fund for the just transition”, Policy brief, Jacques Delors Institute, January 2022.
SUR LE MÊME THÈME
ON THE SAME THEME
PUBLICATIONS
The Road to a New European Automotive Strategy: Trade and Industrial Policy Options

Employment and skills for the green transition in the EU

Make the Social Climate Fund a game changer to tackle energy poverty

MÉDIAS
MEDIAS
Climat : l’UE veut faire payer le CO2 aux ménages, malgré le risque social

Les zones à faibles émissions, une stratégie pas si écologique

Le b.a.-ba des zones à faibles émissions avec Reporterre

Le fonds social pour le climat de l’UE, une révolution qui reste à négocier

French strike tests discontent waters

Explosion des prix de l’énergie : les ménages précaires mis à rude épreuve

« Fit for 55 » : Après l’accord au Conseil, les eurodéputés alertent sur le risque de résurgence des Gilets jaunes

Pourquoi le futur marché européen du carbone menace la paix sociale… et le climat

Social Climate Fudge

Fit for 55 : des accords à l’arrachée… au prix d’une ambition revue à la baisse

Manquera-t-on un jour d’électricité ?

Transition énergétique : qu’est-ce que le Fonds social pour le climat ?

FT Europe Express: Social climate gap

Klimaschutz oder sozialer Friede? Warum die EU in einem Dilemma steckt

L’Institut Jacques Delors critique le projet de Fonds social pour le climat et l’extension du système ETS
