Climate policy ontology (Version February 2025). Deliverable 4.5.1.1

Weko S, Bersalli G, Chaianong A, Milioritsas I, Lilliestam J (2025)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Other publication type

Publication year: 2025

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.15583093

Abstract

The climate crisis has led to increased engagement from governments around the world to mitigate
emissions. At the same time, academia has increasingly focused on how this can be done as quickly
as possible, and lively debates have emerged on the effectiveness of different policies at reducing
greenhouse gas emissions. Yet, academics are often constrained by a lack of cross-country,
comparable and detailed information on policies.
This is partly because of the way that data is gathered: until now, there has been no unified method
and definition for climate policy and its sub-components of climate policy instruments. We
discovered this issue as part of our work on gathering data on climate policies within NFDI4Energy
Task Area 2: several attempts at gathering and publishing data exist, but they are not consistent,
which makes analysis difficult, because there was no unified or even explicit ontology on climate
policy instruments. This means that climate policy data lacks interoperability and cannot be
combined across sources – hindering researchers from being able to analyze policies, including their
effectiveness. This, in turn, means that empirical knowledge of what works in climate policy is patchy
and limited to the few single cases with good data availability. Multi-case and cross-temporal policy
instrument analysis is rare.
We therefore create a climate policy instrument ontology which includes various climate policy
instruments governments use to lower greenhouse gas emissions. Our ontology of potential policy
instruments is based on the Open Energy Ontology (OEO), and typologies that institutions use to
gather climate policy data from Climate Policy Database (CPDB) and Climate Policy Radar (CPR). This
is also complemented by a preliminary academic literature review and input from climate policy
researchers. This results in this draft ontology. At the time of writing this document, we are
validating, cross-checking and, wherever needed or helpful, updating it through a systematic
literature review.
Our ontology demonstrates the importance of systems to harmonize the collection and analysis of
climate policy data, which are currently lacking. In addition, it reveals blind spots in the current
academic research on how different instruments impact emissions and decarbonization, for example
on regulatory instruments, which may be due to a lack of cross-national and machine-readable data
given the lack of comparable categorizations through ontologies.

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How to cite

APA:

Weko, S., Bersalli, G., Chaianong, A., Milioritsas, I., & Lilliestam, J. (2025). Climate policy ontology (Version February 2025). Deliverable 4.5.1.1.

MLA:

Weko, Silvia, et al. Climate policy ontology (Version February 2025). Deliverable 4.5.1.1. 2025.

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