EKYL has been awarded a new research grant from Horizon Europe
28.09.2023EKYL has recently been awarded a new research grant from Horizon Europe as participant in a project titled PREFIGURE – Prototypes for addressing the housing-energy-nexus. This collaborative research endeavour, led by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, includes research partners from Sofia, Barcelona, Amsterdam, Rome, Tallinn, and Bonn.
European societies are confronted with an interlinked housing and energy crisis that is challenging social cohesion. As access to affordable housing becomes limited, inflation and accelerating energy prices pinpoint that energy poverty and housing inequalities mutually reinforce. Within this context, the deep renovation of the existing housing stock is promoted as a key policy action. However, despite policy efforts from the EU to the local state, there are growing concerns that the transformation of housing markets may further aggravate the existing housing inequalities and energy poverty. To offer more equitable pathways to the green transition, PREFIGURE puts the spotlight on existing and emerging individual and collective efforts of policy, market, and social innovation.
The project aims at identifying, tracing, analysing and networking emerging and active ‘prototypes of change’ with regard to the housing-energy efficiency/energy poverty nexus.
PREFIGURE research objectives are to:
(1) offer understanding of how practices of innovation contribute to affordable housing renovation schemes that disrupt existing housing inequalities and energy poverty;
(2) identify how housing policies trigger sustainable housing and energy transitions, how financial incentives for energy-efficient buildings are accessed by different types of owners and tenants, and how different user groups perceive sustainable housing and energy transitions, with a particular focus on income and wealth polarisation consequences on vulnerable groups; and
(3) mobilise knowledge about innovative practices for sustainable housing and energy transitions and co-create evidence-based policy solutions.
Method innovation relies on fusing transformative qualitative and quantitative with technological and real-laboratory research to co-create and up-scale knowledge and practices that signal the green transition.
The project will run between April 2024 and March 2027 and the contact point in Estonia for the project is Anu Sarnet, head of international relations and projects in EKYL (Anu.Sarnet@ekyl.ee).