The COIN Open Days are one-day (or half-day) workshops that bring together researchers and policy analysts from the European Commission, international organisations, think tanks and the academia with scientists of the European Commission’s Competence Centre on Composite Indicators and Scoreboards (COIN) with a view to discuss together how to further improve their monitoring tools ‒ be those indicator frameworks, scoreboards, composite indicators‒ and to ensure that these tools are developed using the highest standards in composite indicator methodology.

 

How can I reserve a COIN Open Day?

The calendar below shows the COIN Open Days scheduled in 2019/2020. To make a request for reserving a COIN Open Day, just click on the dates highlighted in green to see what type of information is needed and how to book an Open Day. Clicking on the email therein, a pre-filled form appears.

How can I prepare myself for a COIN Open Day?

After receiving confirmation that your request has been accepted:

  • The JRC-COIN team will share a protocol for discussion that builds on the 10-step guide of the OECD/JRC Handbook on Composite Indicators.
  • A couple of days before the COIN Open Day, you are welcome to share some background documentation on your monitoring tool with the JRC-COIN team.
  • During the COIN Open Day, you could either discuss the index/scoreboard going over the material you have shared and/or give a presentation (highly recommended).
COIN Open Day (reserved)
COIN Open Day (available)
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COIN Open Day - Soil Quality Index

COIN Open Day - Soil Quality Index

Date of event: 
Friday, May 18, 2018 - 09:30 to 17:00
Where: 

Ispra, Italy

Aim:

This workshop brings together the JRC-D1, currently working on the formulation of a Soil Quality Index, to be used in the context Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), with scientists of the European Commission’s Competence Centre on Composite Indicators and Scoreboards (COIN) with a view to discuss together how to further improve the index and to ensure that it is developed using the highest standards in composite indicator methodology.

Description:

The aim of the Soil Quality Index is to simplify the current calculations of the impacts on soil quality caused by anthropogenic use of land. The starting point of this work is the LANCA tool, which assesses the impacts due to several types of land use at country level on five soil properties (e.g. the ability to resist to erosion or the ability to filter groundwater). The final aggregated index will be recommended within the Product Environmental Footprint (PEF) framework.

Societal impact:

Soil quality degradation is the evident result of the increased pressure on land resources associated with the intensification and expansion of human activities. Globally, natural landscapes are being transformed in order to provide food, fiber, water and shelter to an increasing world population. Such changes in land uses have the effect of undermining the capacity of the ecosystems to sustain food and fiber production, regulate climate and air quality and provide freshwater storage. The indicators provided by the LANCA tool have therefore the role of supporting the assessment of the impacts of human activities on soil quality loss. Such an assessment is necessary in order to manage the trade-off between meeting the current demand for goods and ensuring that the capacity of the biosphere to provide goods and services in the long term is maintained. However, to ensure and facilitate their applicability within the context of LCA, these five separate indicators should be merged into a single index encompassing all the aspects taken into consideration by the five indicators as much as possible.

Figure 1: Comparison between the impacts caused by occupying arable land in the US, Germany and Bhutan. BP: biotic production loss potential, ER: erosion potential, GR: groundwater regeneration reduction potential, MF: mechanical filtration reduction potential, PF: physicochemical filtration reduction potential

18 May 2018 - 09:30 to 17:00
 
 
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