Étude RISK2050

Understanding the physical risks and vulnerabilities for Luxembourg's economy

The RISK2050 initiative is a major study project aiming at better understanding the vulnerability of Luxembourg’s economy to physical environmental risks. It was initiated by Luxembourg Strategy in 2022 and commissioned to an interdisciplinary consortium of researchers at the University of Luxembourg.

The point of departure is that economic activity has been fuelling an overshooting of ecosystem limits (single materiality). This generates environmental risks that jeopardize economic productivity in return (double materiality). RISK2050 examines 3 major risks categories more closely: climate change, resource scarcity and biodiversity losses.

Aggregated findings from scientific publications were used to develop a Risk Matrix of 23 hazard indicators (8 for climate change and biodiversity loss each, and 7 for resource scarcity) arranged by the probability of their materialization and the severity of their impact for Luxembourg's economy by 2050. In parallel, the research team engaged with local stakeholders representing 6 economic sectors (4 productive - Industrial manufacturing, Construction, Forestry, and Food processing; and 2 supportive – Energy and Logistics) and asked them about their own perception of the evolution of these threats by 2050. The empirical material that this generated was then compared with the projected estimates drawn from the literature review. The comparative process allowed to reveal gaps in perceptions – inconsistencies (over- and underestimations) between the perceived and the projected risks, that were integrated to the Risk Matrix.

The study thus identified areas of vulnerabilities and derived a list of recommendations to improve corporate adaptation capabilities. One key overarching finding is that companies operating in Luxembourg should conduct self-assessment checks more systematically to better understand the links between the environment and their activities. Another insight concerns the widespread tendency of local stakeholders to overlook fundamental links between the 3 risk categories. Indeed, some threats (particularly those relating to climate change) are systematically perceived to be riskier and others (often biodiversity-related ones) to be less risky. RISK2050 also assesses practical solutions and highlights, for instance, that diverse vegetation in mixed-use spaces and thriving wetland ecosystems can efficiently mitigate flood risks.

Recommendations are clustered in 4 groups of measures: ‘technical’, ‘operational & behavioural’, ‘governance’, and ‘territorial & nature-based’ ones.

Avertissement

Les opinions exprimées dans cette publication sont celles des auteurs et ne correspondent pas nécessairement à celles du ministère de l'Économie ou du gouvernement du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg

Copyright © 2024, Luxembourg Stratégie

Reproduction

Le rapport RISK2050 peut être reproduit en totalité ou en partie et dans n'importe quelle forme pour un usage professionnel, éducatif ou à but non lucratif sans autorisation particulière de la part du détenteur des droits d'auteurs sous réserve de citer la source.  

Pour plus d'information, veuillez contacter : luxstrategie@eco.etat.lu

Le rapport RISK2050 est à citer comme suit :

Zlatanova, K. et al. (2024) RISK2050: Study on the vulnerability of the national economy in the face of physical risks. University of Luxembourg, commissioned by Luxembourg Strategy, the strategic foresight directorate of the ministry of the Economy, Luxembourg, Luxembourg

Organisatioun

Lëtzebuerg Strategie