EUROPEAN PROJECTS ➤ LIFE ➤ REVERTER
Project duration | 01/11/2022 - 30/11/2025 |
Total budget CRES budget |
1.657.177,57 € 135.982,28 € |
Website | https://reverterhub.eu |
The REVERTER project deals with the energy poverty, which is a crucial socioeconomic problem depriving people of a basic standard of living and quality of life. More specifically, the REVERTER project intends to develop a number of building renovation roadmaps to alleviate energy poverty by addressing the low energy efficiency of dwellings.
The building renovation roadmaps target to the worst performing homes first (“worst first” principle), while they will be tailor-made to the characteristics of the building stock, the vulnerable households and the climate conditions, so as to cover a sufficiently cohesive group of cases, allowing for a larger-scale rollout and replication of the proposed actions.
By targeting the worst homes first and by focusing on the most cost and environmental effective renovation methods, the REVERTER project aims at upgrading a greater number of homes for a given budget leading to considerable impacts, such as the maximization of the energy and costs savings and the reduction of the GHG and other pollutants emissions.
Moreover, the REVERTER project will cope with split-incentive dilemmas and will address market, information and behavioural failures through the creation of “one-stop shops” as defaults for the enrolment of vulnerable households in subsidy schemes for building retrofit. These households will be supported to increase their awareness about efficient energy use before and after energy interventions by the REVERTER Ambassadors, information campaigns and capacity building actions, all with a view to improving their health, well-being and living comfort.
Finally, the REVERTER project will implement the building renovation roadmaps for the reduction of energy poverty by establishing a network of pilots in four different European countries (i.e., Bulgaria, Greece, Latvia and Portugal) with different climate regions and socioeconomic conditions, and fostering the active engagement of local, national and EU stakeholder groups and experts.
Partners:
NTUA (Greece)
ISR (Portugal)
EKODOMA (Latvia)
GSC (Bulgaria)
FEP (Spain)
CRES (Greece)
WIT BERRY (Latvia)
B. LINK (Spain)
Brezovo (Bulgaria)
E.K.PI.ZO (Greece)
CMC (Portugal)
REA (Latvia)