Economic analysis of Climate Impacts and Policy Division
Edificio Porta dell'Innovazione - Piano 2 - via della Libertà 12 - 30175 Venezia Marghera (VE), Italy
Enrica is professor in environmental economics at the Department of Economics at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice (Italy), research scientist at Fondazione Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici (CMCC), and at RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment. She is a member of the Centre’s Scientific Committee, “THE NEW INSTITUTE: Centre for Environmental Humanities (NICHE)“, where she also co-leads the research cluster on energy humanities. She coordinates the PhD program in Science and Management of Climate Change at Ca’ Foscari University since 2018 (as deputy coordinator and as coordinator since 2020).
She has been the recipient of an ERC Starting Grant grantee with the project ENERGYA – Energy Use for Adaptation (2018-2023). Before she was researcher at Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM), and she collaborates with several research organizations in Europe (CEPS, ZEW) and in the U.S. (Joint Program at MIT, Boston University). Her research focuses on the global impacts of climate change on the economy and the society, and on human adaptation to impacts, specifically to extreme heat. She works with integrated assessment models as well as with econometric and statistical approaches.
ULTIME PUBBLICAZIONI
- Population Aging and Heat Exposure in the 21st Century: Which World Regions Are at Greatest Risk?
- The cost of climate change on households and families in the EU
- Understanding systemic cooling poverty
- Understanding systemic cooling poverty
- Assessing Macro-economic Effects of Climate Impacts on Energy Demand in EU Sub-national Regions
- Air-conditioning adoption and electricity demand highlight climate change mitigation–adaptation tradeoffs
- Adaptation to climate change: Air-conditioning and the role of remittances
- Increased energy use for adaptation significantly impacts mitigation pathways
- Energy Intensity Convergence and Its Long-Run Minimum
- Distributional consequences of climate change impacts on residential energy demand across Italian households