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8:30 - 9:00 (30min)
Registration & Coffee
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
A1: Climate Finance I
D207
Mingxun (Richard) Wang, Georgia Institute of Technology, United States
› Look up and ahead: how climate scenarios affect European sovereign risk
- Luca De Angelis, Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna, Italy
09:00-09:30 (30min)
› Women on boards and carbon assurance
- Md Safiullah, RMIT University, Australia
09:30-10:00 (30min)
› Impact of local temperature shocks on small businesses in the U.S.
- Mingxun (Richard) Wang, Georgia Institute of Technology, United States
10:00-10:30 (30min)
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
A2: Climate Finance II
D208
Maximilian Gill, Universität Witten Herdecke, Germany
› Credit risk and climate sentiments: the credibility frontier of decarbonization
- Régis Gourdel, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria
09:00-09:22 (22min)
› Strategic complementarities, banks' stranded asset dynamics, and financial Stability
- Yao Dong, King’s College London, United Kingdom
09:22-09:44 (22min)
› Divestment from fossil fuels: Evidence from ownership data
- Alain Naef, ESSEC Business School, France
09:44-10:06 (22min)
› Economic limits of Bitcoin's environmental promises: Pathway or pitfall for the green transformation?
- Maximilian Gill, Universität Witten Herdecke, Germany
10:06-10:30 (24min)
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
A3: Climate Risk and Disclosures I
D209
Nazim Hussain, University of Groningen, Netherlands
› Climate and environmental policy risk and debt
- Karol Kempa, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Germany
09:00-09:22 (22min)
› When speed trumps sustainability: Environmental disclosure frequency and environmental investment myopia
- Sheryl Zhang, ESSEC Business School, France
09:22-09:44 (22min)
› The spillover effects of insurer climate supervision into shadow markets
- Weiling Liu, Northeastern University, United States
09:44-10:06 (22min)
› Does greenwashing pay off? Evidence from the corporate bond market
- Nazim Hussain, University of Groningen, Netherlands
10:06-10:30 (24min)
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
A4: Climate Risk and Disclosures II
D210
Tomás Del Barrio Castro, University of the Balearic Islands, Spain
› ESG rating and ambiguity: An informative and distorted signal-based approach
- Giorgio Bongermino, Università di Bologna, Italy
09:00-09:22 (22min)
› Global versus idiosyncratic temperature shocks: Analyzing the economic impact of weather on French agriculture
- Thomas Jacquet, Université Paris Nanterre, France
09:22-09:44 (22min)
› A shared vision towards global climate justice
- Adrien Fabre, Centre International de Recherche sur l'Environnement et le Développement, France
09:44-10:06 (22min)
› Modeling and forecasting the long memory of cyclical trends in paleoclimate data
- Tomás Del Barrio Castro, University of the Balearic Islands, Spain
10:06-10:30 (24min)
10:30 - 11:00 (30min)
Coffee break
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
B1: Natural Resources, Risk, Welfare and Social Preferences I
D207
Faten Lakhal, EMLV Devinci Business School, France
› Exporting carbon emissions? Evidence from space
- Santanu Kundu, University of Mannheim, Germany
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› Is the Government always greener?
- Salvatore Perdichizzi, University of Padova, Italy
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› Supply chain stress tests for critical inputs: A proof-of-concept
- Béatrice Dumont, University Sorbonne Paris Nord, France & College of Europe, Belgium & Climate Economics Chair, France
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› Cleaner Energy, Higher Risk? Firm-level Exposure to Critical Minerals
- Viet Nguyen-Tien, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
12:06-12:30 (24min)
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
B2: Just Energy Transition
D208
Theodora Bermpei, IESEG School of Management, France
› A fish rots from the head down: The contagion effect of upstream firms' environmental misconduct on downstream firms' green innovation continuity
- Jifeng Hong, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› Revisiting the market for lemons: Quality uncertainty in the battery-engine-vehicle era
- Florens Pfann, Maastricht University, Netherlands
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› The impact of supply and demand driven oil price uncertainty on the cost of bank loans
- Theodora Bermpei, IESEG School of Management, France
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› Do COPs really help sustainability. An asset pricing perspective.
- Alessandro Gastaldello, Leibniz Institute for Financial Research SAFE
12:06-12:30 (24min)
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
B3: Climate and Carbon Finance I
D209
Tunde Odusami, Widener University, United States
› The optimal tax on polluting energy under credit market imperfection
- Mahsa Jahan-Dideh, Tehran Institute for Advanced Studies, Iran
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› Mobilizing credit for clean energy: De-risking and public loan provision under learning spillovers
- Paul Waidelich, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› Can we trust in nationally determined contributions, NDCs as a climate governance tool?
- Younsung Kim, George Mason University, United States
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› Hedging the climate risk of real estate investments using factor mimicking portfolios of real-estate stocks
- Tunde Odusami, Widener University, United States
12:06-12:30 (24min)
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
B4: Green Finance I
D210
Fabio Fornari, European Central Bank, Germany
› Social cost evaluation of forest carbon stocks of India
- Anika Loiwal, TERI School of Advanced Studies, India
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› Geopolitical risk aligned and volatility forecasting in commodity markets
- Thanos Verousis, Vlerick Business School, Belgium
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› How ESG labels influence firms' ownership by ESG institutional investors and their perceived cost of capital
- Sahand Davani, ESADE Barcelona - Sant Cugat, Spain
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› It better be good, it better be green
- Fabio Fornari, European Central Bank, Germany
12:06-12:30 (24min)
12:30 - 13:45 (1h15)
Lunch
13:45 - 14:00 (15min)
Opening Remarks and Welcome Note
14:00 - 15:30 (1h30)
Keynote Lectures
Amphitheater Raymon Aron
Bertrand Badré and Dr. Ben Caldecott
15:30 - 16:00 (30min)
Coffee break
16:00 - 17:00 (1h)
Policy Roundtable “Just Transition, Climate Change, and Growth”
Amphitheater Raymon Aron
Anna Creti, Andreas Kontoleon and Jan Rielaender
19:00 - 22:00 (3h)
Dinner
Bistro Alexandre III
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8:30 - 9:00 (30min)
Coffee break
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
C1: Green Finance II
D207
Ethan Eslahi, IÉSEG School of Management, France
› Corruption kills: Global evidence from natural disasters
- João Jalles, IPAG Business School – France & University of Lisbon - Portugal
09:00-09:30 (30min)
› It's in the financials, stupid! But is it certain?
- Christian Haas, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Germany
09:30-10:00 (30min)
› Mission accomplished? A post-assessment of EU ETS impact on power sector emissions reduction
- Ethan Eslahi, IÉSEG School of Management, France
10:00-10:30 (30min)
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
C2: Climate Risk and Macroeconomic implications I
D208
Lucas Bretschger, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
› The effects of flood risk on the transaction price of houses in France
- Thierry Kamionka, Centre de Recherche en Économie et Statistique, France
09:00-09:22 (22min)
› Effects of monetary policy rates on energy technologies: Implications for the European green transition
- Sasha Serebriakova, Maastricht University, Netherlands
09:22-09:44 (22min)
› Local finance and economic resilience during extreme weather events
- Mark Sanders, Maaschicht University, Netherlands
09:44-10:06 (22min)
› Decarbonization with heterogeneous knowledge creation and technology tipping
- Lucas Bretschger, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
10:06-10:30 (24min)
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
C3: Climate and Green Finance
D209
Geert Langenus, National Bank of Belgium, Belgium
› Are technology adoption subsidies really so unfair?
- Grover David, EESC-GEM Grenoble Ecole de Management, France
09:00-09:22 (22min)
› Banks' climate commitments: A silver lining for climate action or just hot air? First evidence from the Swiss mortgage business
- Mischa Aeschlimann, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
09:22-09:44 (22min)
› Transforming energy access finance: Sustainable financing for clean energy transitions in the Global South
- Jiska De Groot, University of Cape Town, South Africa
09:44-10:06 (22min)
› The impact of climate transition policies on Belgian firms: What can we learn from a survey?
- Geert Langenus, National Bank of Belgium, Belgium
10:06-10:30 (24min)
9:00 - 10:30 (1h30)
C4: Energy, Environment, and Climate Models
D210
Julien Thavarda, University of Lorraine, France
› The impact of the free electricity program and farmer attitudes: A study from the Telangana State of India
- Krishna Reddy Chittedi, University of Hyderabad, India
09:00-09:22 (22min)
› Decarbonizing multilateral development banks' global power generation portfolios
- Clemens-Maria Lehofer, Technical University of Munich, Germany
09:22-09:44 (22min)
› Dealing with water scarcity: a CGE model for assessing macroeconomic impacts in Nelson Mandela Bay (SA)
- Franck Viroleau, Université de Rouen, France
09:44-10:06 (22min)
› How climate physical risks affect banking stability? The Latin American experience with strong ENSO events
- Julien Thavarda, University of Lorraine, France
10:06-10:30 (24min)
10:30 - 11:00 (30min)
Coffee break
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
D1: Climate Risk and Disclosures III
D207
Michael König-Sykorova, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Technische Universität Ilmenau, Germany
› Exploring the evidence on the association between monetary and financial policy shocks and climate finance: The case of the Small Island Developing States
- Stephanie Werleman, University of Groningen, Netherlands and Central Bank of Aruba, Aruba
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› The United States washes its hands of the Paris Agreement: Is corporate ESG performance faltering in the climate Storm?
- Xuejing Yu, University College Dublin Michael Smurfit Graduate Business School, Ireland
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› Energy efficiency and consumption patterns: Insights from EPCs and smart meters in the French residential sector
- Edouard Civel, Université Paris Dauphine-PSL, France
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› Effectiveness of emission reduction policies and the role of corporate governance
- Michael König-Sykorova, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Technische Universität Ilmenau, Germany
12:06-12:30 (24min)
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
D2: Energy Markets and Green Finance
D208
Hongyu Shan, China Europe International Business School, China
› Why do investors discriminate against high emitting green bond issuers?
- Vivi Yuwei Liao, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong SAR China
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› Oil price uncertainty and the macroeconomy
- Athanasios Triantafyllou, IÉSEG School of Management, France
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› Green vs. dirty cryptocurrencies: Information sharing and market stability during crisis
- Sana Gaied Chortane, Institut Des Hautes Etudes Commerciales, Tunisia
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› How does ESG shape consumption?
- Hongyu Shan, China Europe International Business School, China
12:06-12:30 (24min)
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
D3: Energy Markets I
D209
Monika Papiez, Krakow University of Economics, Poland
› An empirically validated open source approach for calculating the cost of capital of onshore wind, offshore wind and solar PV worldwide
- Katharina Wildgruber, Public Policy for the Green Transition, TU Munich, Germany
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› Energy from renewable sources, corruption, and inflation: why is the EU's growth so sluggish? Exploring nonlinearities in light with the energy transition
- Catherine Buneau, University Paris 1, France
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› Spatial disparities of energy transition in Europe
- Krzysztof Wasniewski, The Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski Krakow University, Poland
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› How does environmental policy stringency affect the CO2 emissions in the OECD and BRICS countries?
- Monika Papiez, Krakow University of Economics, Poland
12:06-12:30 (24min)
11:00 - 12:30 (1h30)
D4: Energy Markets II
D210
Marco Baudino, Université Côte d'Azur, CNRS-GREDEG, France
› Evaluating the impact of climate risk measures on firm value: A cross-country study using machine learning models
- Meryem Yankol-Schalck, IPAG Business School, France
11:00-11:22 (22min)
› Carbon curse: As you extract, so you will burn
- Adrien Desroziers, Université du Havre Normandie, France
11:22-11:44 (22min)
› Enhancing hybrid forecasting models with cross-entropy, fuzzy-logic and attention mechanisms
- Heni Boubaker, IPAG Business School, France
11:44-12:06 (22min)
› Oil rents, renewable energy and the role of financial development: evidence from OPEC+ members
- Marco Baudino, Université Côte d'Azur, CNRS-GREDEG, France
12:06-12:30 (24min)
12:30 - 14:00 (1h30)
Lunch
14:00 - 15:00 (1h)
Policy Keynote
Amphitheater Raymon Aron
Amélie de Montchalin
15:00 - 15:30 (30min)
Coffee break
15:30 - 17:00 (1h30)
E1: Climate Finance and Risk I
D207
Evzen Kocenda, Charles University, Czech Republic
› From Stranded Assets to Assets-at-Risk: Reframing the narrative for European private financial institutions
- Chaudhary Natasha, Institute for Climate Economics, France
15:30-15:52 (22min)
› The false promise of a sustainable finance regime: A financial system perspective
- Willem Klok, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
15:52-16:14 (22min)
› Evaluating climate risk in the financial sector: a bibliometric analysis.
- Violeta Bringas Fernández, Santander Financial Institute (SANFI), Universidad de Cantabria, Spain
16:14-16:36 (22min)
› Geopolitical risk and extreme spillovers among oil-based commodities
- Evzen Kocenda, Charles University, Czech Republic
16:36-17:00 (24min)
15:30 - 17:00 (1h30)
E2: Climate Finance and Risk II
D208
Vigdis Boasson, Central Michigan University, United States
› Forecasting carbon prices: What is the role of technology?
- Nada Mselmi, RITM, Paris Saclay University, France
15:30-15:52 (22min)
› Endogenous innovative financing of renewable energy and inclusive catch-up in Africa: Insights from East Asia
- Omolola Amoussou, African Development Bank, Côte d’Ivoire
15:52-16:14 (22min)
› Systemic risk, dynamic correlations, and portfolio optimization in the Hydrogen economy: Evidence from market crises
- Alamgir Hossain, University of Vaasa, Finland
16:14-16:36 (22min)
› Climate change risks on corporate valuation and stock returns
- Vigdis Boasson, Central Michigan University, United States
16:36-17:00 (24min)
15:30 - 17:00 (1h30)
E3: Natural Resources, Risk, Welfare and Social Preferences II
D209
José Marques, University of Aveiro, Portugal
› The effects of geopolitical risk on investor attention towards renewable energy: Evidence from the global context and Turkey
- Maria-Eugenia Sanin, Université Paris-Saclay, France
15:30-16:00 (30min)
› Energy poverty response to COVID - 19 and energy cris i s in European NUTS 1 regions
- Sławomir Śmiech, Krakow University of Economics, Poland
16:00-16:30 (30min)
› Geopolitical risks and energy commodities dynamics in G7 economies
- José Marques, University of Aveiro, Portugal
16:30-17:00 (30min)
15:30 - 17:00 (1h30)
E4: Green Finance and Sustainable Investment
D210
Mara Madaleno, University of Aveiro, Portugal
› Empirical research on ESG factor optimized asset pricing and multifactor models
- Sinian Zheng, University College Dublin, Ireland
15:30-15:52 (22min)
› Taking the wind of China's accelerated carbon neutrality transition
- Qiyu Wang, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR & Zhejiang University of Finance and Economics, China
15:52-16:14 (22min)
› How do ESG rating changes affect credit risk? Evidence from the credit default swap markets
- Yijia Zhang, Bayes Business School, City University of London, United Kingdom
16:16-16:36 (20min)
› Employee ownership in companies in the energy sector: Approach to financial performance and corporate social responsibility
- Mara Madaleno, University of Aveiro, Portugal
16:36-17:00 (24min)
17:00 - 17:00 ()
Closing
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