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Summary Sustainable Development | Universiteit Gent | 2025/26

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Summary of the Sustainable Development course at Universiteit Gent (2025/26), covering all eleven lectures from introduction through policy implementation. Topics include sustainable development theory, climate and energy policy (European Green Deal, Fit for 55), economic approaches to sustainability (Dasgupta review, discount rates), and sustainability indicators (GDP, GPI, Genuine Savings, capital approaches). This well-organized summary by Aaron Van Goethem is ideal for exam preparation and quickly grasping the full course content without needing to review all lecture materials. Lecture 5,6 and 7 'Inidcators' was made with Claude AI. Lacture 8 was entirely made with Claude because of limited time available.

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SUSTAINABLE summary

DEVELOPMENT
2025-2026

By Aaron Van Goethem

,Table of Contents
Lecture 1: Introduction to Sustainable Development ................................................................4
How are we doing, clouds on the horizon?.............................................................................4
Economicsts .......................................................................................................................4
SDefinitions .........................................................................................................................5
Capital ................................................................................................................................7
Collapse and tipping points ..................................................................................................8
IPAT ................................................................................................................................... 11
Lecture 2&4: Theory............................................................................................................... 13
Lecture 2: .......................................................................................................................... 13
The Dasgupta review .......................................................................................................... 13
Discount Rate .................................................................................................................... 14
1) Declining discount rate ................................................................................................... 17
2) Dual discounting ............................................................................................................ 17
Lecture 4: .......................................................................................................................... 20
Capital: ............................................................................................................................. 20
Cake eating: ...................................................................................................................... 22
Distinguishing current welfare and Sustainability ................................................................ 23
Correct accounting prices .................................................................................................. 26
Lecture 3: Climate Energy ...................................................................................................... 27
1. Long-run Perspective on Energy and Climate Policy ......................................................... 28
2. European Climate Policy: The European Green Deal ........................................................ 29
3. The ‘Fit for 55’ Package ................................................................................................... 30
4. Key Policy Instruments of the Fit for 55 Package ............................................................... 31
5. Political Pressure and the Future of Fit for 55 ................................................................... 35
6. Classification and Evaluation of Climate Policy Instruments ............................................ 36
7. Summary: Learning Objectives ....................................................................................... 39
Lecture 5,6&7: Indicators....................................................................................................... 40
Lecture 5: Indicators I — GDP, Monetary Approaches and the GPI ........................................... 40
1. Framework and the Brundtland Starting Point .................................................................. 40
2. GDP and Its Discontents................................................................................................. 41
3. Better Monetary Measures: The Corrected GDP Family .................................................... 42
4. Measure of Economic Welfare (MEW) and SMEW ............................................................ 42
5. ISEW, GPI, and the Genuine Progress Indicator ................................................................ 43
6. Evaluation: Pros and Cons of the Monetary/Corrected GDP Approach .............................. 46


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,Lecture 6: Indicators II — The Capital Approach, Genuine Savings, CWON and Dashboard
Indicators.............................................................................................................................. 46
1. The Capital Approach: A Portfolio View of Sustainability................................................... 46
2. The Wealth Equation and Two Approaches ...................................................................... 47
3. Genuine Savings (GS) and Adjusted Net Savings (ANS)..................................................... 48
4. The Hartwick Rule .......................................................................................................... 50
5. Measuring the Total Stock: CWON (World Bank) .............................................................. 51
6. Evaluation: Pros and Cons of the Capital Approach ......................................................... 52
7. Dashboard Indicators: The SDGs and Multi-Dimensional Approaches .............................. 52
Lecture 7: Indicators III — Composite Indexes, Capabilities and Equivalent Income ................. 53
1. Composite / Hybrid Indexes: The Middle Way .................................................................. 53
2. Human Development Index (HDI) .................................................................................... 53
3. Other Composite Indicators ........................................................................................... 56
4. The Ecological Footprint (EF) .......................................................................................... 56
5. Individual-Level Measures: Capabilities and Subjective Well-Being .................................. 57
6. Equivalent Income: Bridging Objectivity and Individual Preferences ................................. 58
7. The Two-Pillar Framework ............................................................................................... 59
Lecture 7&10: Behavioral change ........................................................................................... 61
Lecture 7 ........................................................................................................................... 61
Assignment and group discussion ...................................................................................... 61
Lecture 10 ......................................................................................................................... 64
The challenge .................................................................................................................... 64
Determinants of Behavior................................................................................................... 65
Lecture 8: Resource allocation and recycling & Economics of Electric vehicle transition (Guest
lecture) ................................................................................................................................. 73
1. Introduction: Why the EV Transition Matters .................................................................... 73
2. A Brief History of the Electric Vehicle ............................................................................... 74
3. Demand: Consumer Choices and Budget Constraints ..................................................... 75
4. Supply: Market Failures and the Charging Infrastructure Problem ..................................... 79
5. Government Incentives: Desired and Undesired Effects ................................................... 81
6. Charging Behaviour and Electricity-System Impacts ........................................................ 84
7. The Full Carbon Picture: EVs in a Wider Transport Context ............................................... 86
8. Summary: Learning Objectives ....................................................................................... 87
Lecture 8 Part 2: Scarce Resource Allocation and Recycling (Guest Lecture) ............................ 88
1. Static Efficiency ............................................................................................................. 88
2. Dynamic Efficiency and the Discount Rate ...................................................................... 89


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, 3. Resource Types and Classification .................................................................................. 90
4. The Two-Period Model .................................................................................................... 91
5. The N-Period Model and Hotelling's Rule ......................................................................... 93
6. Perfect Competition versus Monopoly ............................................................................. 95
7. Two-Period Model with Recycling .................................................................................... 96
8. Numerical Application: Sand Extraction (Hoogmartens et al., 2018) ................................. 98
9. Recycling in Practice: Critical Minerals and EV Batteries .................................................. 99
10. Battery Cost Dynamics: Learning-by-Doing and Policy ................................................. 102
11. Summary: Learning Objectives ................................................................................... 103
Lecture 9: Electricity transition and markets ......................................................................... 105
1. The energy transition .................................................................................................... 105
2. The electricity supply chain .......................................................................................... 105
3. Electricity market ......................................................................................................... 106
4. Model of optimal investment in electricity generation capacity ....................................... 108
5. What happens if we add renewables? ........................................................................... 109
6. What do we need to do for a 100% carbon-free electricity system? (in Europe by 2040) ... 111




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