The document discusses three scenarios for the Paris Metropole achieving carbon neutrality by 2050:
1) Green Tech Evolution, where technology innovation drives green economic growth but changes are incremental and require coordinated policy.
2) The Blame Game, where social and economic problems delay climate action until extreme weather increases inequality and activism demands change.
3) Paving the Way, where local collaboration designs evidence-based climate policies addressing inequality, drawing society into effective progress. All scenarios require aligning governance, ensuring a just transition, allowing quick areas to lead, and collaboration across government, business and society.
2. CONTENTS
FOREWORD3
SUMMARY 4
KEY INSIGHTS 6
INTRODUCTION8
PARIS TODAY 11
Innovation11
Inequality 13
Emissions14
THREE SCENARIOS 16
Green Tech Evolution 16
The Blame Game 22
Paving the Way 26
CONCLUSION32
Acknowledgements34
Glossary34
Endnotes34
A COLLABORATIVE APPROACH
Shell and Leonard (Vinci Group) organised a scenarios workshop
in Paris in 2019, bringing together public, private and civil society
stakeholders. The objective was to broaden the conversation
about the future of the Paris Metropole and the collaborations
required to address common pressures, in order to transform the
ways in which we work together to meet the goals of the Paris
Climate Action Plan. The workshop assembled 45 experts from
30 different institutions, including the Paris City government, the
Île-de-France region, the French State Ministry for the Ecological
Transition, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development, the International Energy Agency, researchers from
Sorbonne and Stanford universities, as well as some of the largest
French companies. This publication updates the scenarios that
were developed at the workshop to take into account the impact
of COVID-19.
3. BY AURELIEN FABRE, USBEK RICA
FOREWORD
On September 2, 1944, after the French regained control of Paris following four years
of occupation, Paul Valéry wrote a short text entitled “Respirer” (Breathe) for the French
newspaper Le Figaro; it contained several points which have astonishing resonance today:
It is about trying to build a whole new era. Here we are before a universal
disorder of images and questions. We will confront unprecedented situations
and problems, in the face of which almost everything we have learnt from the
past will be feared rather than contemplated. We must begin with an in-depth
analysis of the present…to prepare ourselves for what is needed and protect
ourselves…from surprises and sudden changes in the environment.
This could be a clear and modest definition
of the scenario exercise: “to prepare
ourselves for what is needed
and protect ourselves…from
surprises and sudden changes in
the environment.”
In 2020, as the world experiences a global
health crisis, many recall that the possibility
of a major pandemic had been widely
predicted, and yet the world and its cities
have been very unevenly prepared to face
it. From this perspective, the COVID-19
pandemic could be a precursor of shocks
to come, under the combined effect of
global warming, loss of biodiversity and the
exacerbation of socioeconomic inequality.
The crisis reminds us of the vital importance
of preparation and of our collective ability to
imagine the future.
On a global scale, it is becoming clear
that cities are key links in the chain for
designing and implementing the climate
transition. Examples include the important
role played by city mayors at COP 21,
the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group
which aims to make cities healthier and
more sustainable, and the UN’s Habitat III
Conference on Housing and Sustainable
Urban Development.
The scenarios exercise, led by Shell and
Leonard, intended to create transition
scenarios for the City of Paris to achieve
carbon neutrality by 2050. By inviting
universities, experts and practitioners from
many different professional fields and
disciplines to work together, this exercise
led to the emergence of jointly constructed,
pluralist visions for the future of the
Paris Metropole.
3
4. Cities connect global dilemmas with local
realities. They have powerful levers to guide
transitions – ensuring economic and industrial
activities stay within environmentally and socially
acceptable limits for the people that live there.
The City of Paris has embraced this
responsibility and set an admirable and
ambitious objective to be carbon-neutral
by 2050. To achieve the goals of the Paris
Climate Action Plan, transformation must be
broad – extending beyond the city to include
neighbouring departments. As a result, the
geographic focus for this set of scenarios is the
Paris Metropole (Figure 4, page 12). The Paris
Metropole will need to tackle multiple social
and environmental challenges over the next two
decades. The scale of adaptation is immense.
It will require systemic changes and it will test
cities’ capacities for invention. Equally, there
is cause for enthusiasm and optimism as the
breadth and depth of the work that lies ahead
could be an inspiration for others.
Issues such as climate change and equality will
form the backdrop against which governments,
organisations, institutions and individuals will
have to make many tough choices in the
coming years. A just transition that is fair for all
will be critical – how this is managed could
slow, stall or accelerate decarbonisation and
progress towards climate neutrality. The years
leading up to 2040, therefore, must be marked
by a movement that is inclusive of the entire
population, relies on evidence and facilitates
positive and proactive collaboration that
transcends resentment and boundaries.
This sketch explores three scenarios: Green
Tech Evolution, The Blame Game and Paving
the Way. Each describes different visions of
the future for the Paris Metropole in 2040.
The scenarios consider shifting socioeconomic,
political and technological forces during the
next two decades. They are all framed by two
key uncertainties (socioeconomic inequality
and policy governance) and one important
shared challenge (the effects of climate
SUMMARY
4
5. change). Each scenario illustrates a pathway
to 2040 and describes progress, or lack
thereof, towards the goals of the Paris Climate
Action Plan. Each scenario also indicates what
would need to happen beyond 2040 for the
Paris Metropole to become carbon-neutral.
The overall purpose of this broad exploration is
to guide the wisest possible choices and actions
that should be taken now to achieve the shared
ambitions for the Paris region.
Green Tech Evolution
In Green Tech Evolution, France vigorously
pursues its ambitious plans to become Europe’s
leading technology innovation and start-up
nation, which eventually opens up a greener
economic future. The main driver in pursuing
climate-friendly innovation is the economy.
But change is only incremental, so coordinated
government policy is required to speed up the
energy transition to become climate-neutral
by 2050.
The Blame Game
In The Blame Game, longer-term climate-
related policy decisions are placed on hold,
as immediate social and economic problems
take priority. Inevitable extreme weather events
increasingly hurt the most vulnerable in the
Paris Metropole. Growing mistrust turns to
anger and activism. Eventually, demands for
action to address equality and climate change
result in a sustainable and inclusive economic
growth model.
Paving the Way
In Paving the Way, local city mayors and
communities collaborate to design evidence-
based policy options that address climate
change within the Paris Metropole. Choices are
spurred by citizens’ concerns over climate and
an awareness that connects well-being, health,
climate and inequality, drawing all segments of
society into the debate to achieve steady and
effective progress.
Green Tech Evolution
Technology-led
The Blame Game
Activism-led
Paving the Way
Community-led
Economy
TrustPolicy
Just and fair
transition
Figure 1: Paris Metropole scenarios
5
6. Align governance at all levels.
Different layers of government have
different goals and mandates. In the
Paris Metropole, for instance, local
government can be proactive in
areas such as infrastructure and
micro-mobilities (e.g. electric scooters
and e-bikes). Regional and national
governments can set targets and create
conditions to support green solutions
and innovation, and drive changes
in behaviour. The interplay between
all levels of government – local,
regional and national – will be key to
ensuring that society pulls in the same
direction, giving itself the best chance of
becoming carbon-neutral by 2050.
A just transition that is fair for
all will be critical. Climate and
socioeconomic equality are strongly
linked. The Paving the Way scenario
shows that decarbonisation can occur
at vastly different speeds in different
places, depending on socioeconomic
conditions. Wealthier areas are likely to
1
2
Four key lessons emerge that are common to all three scenarios. To make progress,
public and private decision-makers in the City of Paris and neighbouring departments
must act now and continue to drive change through the 2020s and beyond for the
Paris Metropole to become carbon-neutral by 2050.
KEY INSIGHTS
6
7. have time to be more concerned about
climate change and have more resources
to tackle it. Decarbonisation itself, in turn,
can lead to serious growing economic
disparity, as in Green Tech Evolution,
where green solutions in urban hubs
improve socioeconomic standards, but
with limited spillovers into other areas – at
least initially. Considering and mitigating
socioeconomic disparities – both
current and future – will be essential to
decarbonise successfully.
Parts of the Paris Metropole that
can move quickly must do so.
Carbon neutrality will occur at different
speeds across the Paris Metropole.
Public and private decision-makers
in the City of Paris and neighbouring
departments that can move quickly
must harness the public’s desire to
decarbonise and start to act now.
Progress on energy transitions
depends on collaboration across
government, society and business.
Key drivers in the scenarios include
citizen involvement reinforcing local
government; technology solutions
supporting a greener economy; and
climate activism among citizens driving
government and business action.
Achieving climate neutrality is not about
an either/or approach, it is about
adopting an and/and approach.
Public-private partnerships and
cooperation will be essential. To effect
real change across government,
business and civil society, leaders must
deploy all the tools at their disposal and
individuals must take responsibility for
their actions as part of that change.
3
4
7
8. INTRODUCTION
A carbon-neutral Paris Metropole
Cities are essential actors in the global energy
transition to achieve the 2015 Paris climate
agreement to keep global temperature rise
well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels.
Roughly two-thirds of energy consumption
today occurs in cities, and this will increase as
urbanisation trends intensify. Cities consume
over two-thirds of the world’s energy and
account for more than 70% of global CO2
emissions1
. How cities manage energy will
depend on policies, technologies and the
choices people make. It will require addressing
energy, environmental, mobility and other
urban services. It will also require engaging
with citizens, consumers, governments at
various levels and providers of urban services,
and delivering these services in an integrated,
efficient and low-carbon way.
The Paris Metropole has the opportunity to
demonstrate and exemplify the leadership
required to achieve its namesake, the
Paris Agreement2
.
In May 2018, the Paris municipality released
the Paris Climate Action Plan, setting out the
objective of “making Paris a carbon-neutral
city powered entirely by renewable energy by
2050.” It established detailed targets for 2030
and a vision for 2050 (Figure 2, page 9).
Since then, the COVID-19 pandemic has
plunged the world into an unprecedented
crisis, both in terms of health outcomes and the
economic effect of measures taken to protect
health. It has led to widespread disruption in
domestic economic activity, in global travel and
tourism, and in how we live our lives. While the
pandemic has taken an enormous human and
economic toll, recovery from its effects provides
an opportunity to direct resources, public and
private, to support both economic recovery and
energy transition simultaneously.
Achieving the objectives of the Paris Climate
Action Plan means rewiring the Paris economy
and re-imagining the urban landscape.
It demands fundamental changes to how
citizens live their lives and conduct their
8
9. -50%*
of local greenhouse
gas emissions
-40%*
of the Paris
carbon footprint
-35%*
of energy
consumption
45%*
of renewable energies in
overall consumption, including
10% locally produced
Guarantee a pleasant living environment that is adapted to the climate for all Parisians.
fossil fuel and domestic
heating oil area
ZERO
Become a
CO2 CO2
AIR
By 2030 Paris has set the following targets:
-80%*
of the Paris
carbon footprint
-50%*
energy consumption
throughout the territory
Commit the actors of the Parisian territory to offset the
residual emissions in order to reach
100%*
of renewable energies including
20% locally produced
Ensure the climate resilience of Paris and carry out a socially fair transition.
local greenhouse gas
emissions area
ZERO
Make Paris a
CO2 CO2
By 2050 Paris has set the following targets:
CARBON NEUTRALITY
* Compared to 2004
Conform to the World
Health Organization
recommendations on
AIR QUALITY
Source: Paris Climate Action Plan
Figure 2: Paris Climate Action Plan objectives in 2030 and 2050
9
10. business, as well as a more comprehensive
policy and integrated governance approach
across the Paris Metropole.
Among the other challenges are the city’s
fast urbanisation, the projected increase in
population and the rising demand for mobility
services. All of these are driving growth in
energy demand. Climate impacts, such as the
growing frequency of extreme weather events,
risk exacerbating the already rising income
and wealth inequalities in the Paris Metropole
and across the wider Île-de-France region.
The layered governance of the region will
further complicate the task ahead.
Fortunately, the Paris Metropole is well equipped
to navigate these potential adversities. It has a
strong economy supported by innovation and
tourism, a young population with a dynamic
culture of entrepreneurship, a skilled and
educated workforce, and a less emissions-
intensive economy compared to the rest
of France and other large European cities
like London. In addition, there are relatively
straightforward ways for the city to improve
waste management, road traffic congestion and
the public transport network – steps that would
lower emissions further.
Still, full cooperation between all parts of
society and all sectors of the Paris Metropole
economy will be essential. The three scenarios
explore the interdependencies and uncertainties
– social, political, economic and technological
– as the Paris Metropole evolves over the next
two decades, and what it will take to bridge
the gap from 2040 to achieve carbon neutrality
by 2050.
10
11. PARIS TODAY: INNOVATION
To understand the opportunities and challenges
associated with the Paris Metropole becoming
carbon-neutral by 2050 requires knowing
where it stands today. Each of the scenarios
is based on a combination of trends specific
to the Paris Metropole – social, political,
economic and technological – to describe
three robust and internally consistent alternative
pathways along which the city could evolve.
Given the youth and dynamism of Parisian
culture, its residents may be quick to adapt to
disruptive technologies, such as free-floating
electric scooters, shared electric cars and
bicycles. The metropole’s relatively young
population also benefits from the world’s largest
start-up campus and Europe’s largest co-
working space.
The Paris Metropole economy is highly innovative
relative to comparable European cities and an
attractive destination for investors. For example,
the Paris Metropole has remained the top-
ranking metropolitan area in terms of projects
funded by foreign direct investment in 2019,
overtaking London in 20183
, and it has one of the
highest RD expenditures per capita – higher
than Berlin, London and Madrid (Figure 3).
The innovation economy is supported by a
workforce that is becoming better educated
and shifting towards professional occupations.
For example, nearly 30% of workers occupy
senior management or professional positions
and around half the working population is
university-educated.
Brussels
Capital region
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
EURpercapita
Copenhagen
region
Helsinki
region
Île-de-France Berlin Greater
Madrid
Greater
London
Figure 3: RD expenditure per capita in the Île de France region compared to other European cities
(see Figure 4 outlining the Paris Metropole and regions)
Source: OECD, Vivid Economics analysis4
11
12. Unlike the Île de France or the newly formed Greater Paris, the Paris Metropole is not a single political
entity; instead it represents the diverse nature of the constituent parts. The Petite Couronne (Little Crown)
consists of three departments of Île-de-France bordering the French capital. The Grande Couronne
(Greater Crown, i.e. outer ring) includes the outer four departments of Île‑de-France not bordering Paris.
95 – Val d’Oise
78 – Yvelines
91 – Essone
92 – Hauts-de-Seine
Paris
Suburbs
Outer ring
Usually, the suburbs are referred to
as the Petite Couronne, while the
outer ring is referred to as
the Grand Couronne
Key
77 – Seine-et-Marne
94 – Val-de-Marne
93 – Seine-Saint-Denis
75 – Paris
Figure 4: In this sketch, the Paris Metropole includes Paris and its neighbouring departments
(departments 75, 77, 78, 91, 92, 93, 94 and 95)
12
13. -10
-10 to -5
-2 to -2
-2 to 2
2 to 5
5 to 10
=10
Urban area limit
PARIS TODAY: INEQUALITY
Levels of inequality in the Paris Metropole have
increased sharply in the past 15 years, particularly
in terms of income disparity and living standards.
Poor areas in the north and east of Paris have
become poorer relative to the metropole, while
richer areas in the centre and west of Paris have
become even richer. (Figure 5).
The cost of living and stagnating wages are
important causes of increasing inequality, while
youth unemployment and access to education
remain more difficult compared to other major
cities such as London and Berlin.
Figure 5: The difference between
high and low incomes has
increased between 2001-2015.
Source: Gentrification et
paupérisation au coeur de l’Ile-de-
France Evolutions 2001-2015, Institut
d’aménagement et d’urbanisme (IAU).
This map is based on data by Insee,
FSL and Filosofi.
13
14. PARIS TODAY: EMISSIONS
The Île-de-France economy is less emissions-
intensive than other regions5
, as it is dominated
by service-based sectors such as science,
tourism-driven commerce and public
administration. All Île-de-France departments
outperform the French national average of
5 tonnes of CO2
-equivalent per capita, with
Paris the lowest at 1.5 tonnes per capita.
Emissions per capita are also lower in Île-de-
France than in London (3.5 tonnes per capita)6
.
Road traffic and buildings are the largest
sources of emissions, accounting for 70% of
CO2
emissions and 50% of particulate matter.
(Figure 6, page 15).
While the public transport network within the
city is very dense and one of the most affordable
in Europe, connections between communes
in the suburbs are lacking. Public transport
accounts for 65% of transport in Paris, but 44%
of transport in the wider Île-de-France region7
.
Government incentives for uptake of electric
vehicles in France8
and the new Grand Paris
Express metro network provide residents of
the city’s outer ring suburbs with low-carbon
commuting alternatives and scope for reducing
emissions from road transport.
14
15. Paris’s aging building stock is very energy-
inefficient. Buildings account for more than
40% of CO2
emissions; over one-third of
buildings in the region have the lowest F or
G energy efficiency rating, while only 2% of
buildings achieve standards set by the most
recent energy efficiency law9
. Worst in the
region is Paris city, where around half of the
buildings pre-date 194610
. The Paris Climate
Action Plan sets a target of 1 million buildings
thermally renovated by 2050, but so far only
25% of thermal renovations have improved
the buildings’ energy efficiency rating11
.
Figure 6: Road transport and buildings are the largest polluters by a significant margin; they account
for more than 70% of CO2
and 50% of PM10
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
CO2
Île-de-France
PM10 PM2.5
Agriculture and
construction are also
significant emitters
of particulate matter
Rail and river traffic Construction Agriculture
Airports Waste Energy
Manufacturing Road traffic Buildings
Source: Ministry for the Ecological Transition, AirParif, “Bilan des émissions de polluants atmosphériques et de gaz à
effet de serre” and Vivid Economics analysis.
Note: Energy is defined as thermal power plants, installations for the extraction and refining of oil, and service stations.
15
17. THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE PARIS METROPOLE
The forced lockdown during the COVID-19
pandemic disrupted social norms and stalled
the economy; but it also accelerated the
transformation of relationships with technology
and digital services. Businesses and academic
institutions took this opportunity to invest heavily
in their digital presence and produce innovative
solutions to the new reality of social distancing.
Technology also played an essential role in
enabling the economy to reopen. Data from
track-and-trace apps reveal corridors that
connect COVID-19 low-risk regions and
countries to one another. Equally important
were national and international corporations
working collectively to ensure the economic
recovery was climate friendly. A renewed effort
to build back better for the future ensued.
GREEN TECH EVOLUTION: KEY ATTRIBUTES
Q The COVID-19 disruption drives investment in innovative digital solutions to enable
social distancing and hasten the reopening of economies.
Q In a technology-led economic recovery, Paris fast becomes the innovation and start-
up hub of Europe. But the underlying problems of inequality and deprivation across
the Paris region are largely left unaddressed.
Q The economic recovery is climate friendly, with national and international
corporations working collectively to find innovative ways to reduce emissions in a
renewed drive to support efforts to build back better as society recovers from the
COVID-19 crisis.
Q The divide between the digital haves and digital have-nots widens in the 2030s.
There is progress on energy transitions, but not everyone benefits. Energy access
and affordability continue to be a challenge for many.
Q By the 2040s, a move towards greater government coordination across the Paris
Metropole results in increased shared prosperity. The city and beyond makes fast –
although belated – progress on its 2050 carbon neutrality goal.
17
18. GREEN TECH EVOLUTION
By the mid-2020s, Paris is fast becoming
the innovation and start-up hub in Europe in
technology-related industries. Large public
investments are made to future-proof skills,
while also kick-starting the economic recovery.
In turn, this drives private investors looking
for long-term investment opportunities and
start-ups benefitting from historically low costs
of borrowing. While much of the innovation
takes place at the start-up level, several
large companies see opportunities for large
investments, helping nascent technologies
and solutions to scale up. A vibrant, young,
tech-savvy community centred on Paris thrives
in this new digital world and seeks to solve
complex urban problems in an integrated
fashion. Investments in 5G and 6G networks
are prioritised and act as a springboard for
innovation and technology deployment.
However, while the economic bounce-back
is relatively quick, the underlying problems
of inequality and deprivation across the
Paris Metropole are largely overlooked, with
attention and resources directed towards
innovation. Technology clusters and corridors
thrive, but with limited spill-over to the less
prosperous departments. The problems of
inequality and economic deprivation worsen in
the 2020s. Citizens’ distrust of institutions grows,
leading to frequent protests. In those struggling
departments, long-term unemployment – or jobs
without security – grows, and the level of
education disparity increases.
Through the 2020s, public awareness of the
need to tackle climate change increases across
18
19. France. Policymakers face more pressure to put the
country on a trajectory to achieve its legislated
2050 climate-neutral target. Mainstream policy
focus shifts towards creating a sustainable green
economy, directing technology-led innovations
from the start-up sector towards green solutions
for businesses and consumers. For example, the
Paris Metropole develops programmes to support
innovation and the application of technology to
deliver more efficient and lower-carbon urban
services. In addition, environmental criteria
become stronger over time, driving the adoption
of these green technologies and practices.
A key feature of these programmes is their focus
on flexibility and resilience to climate change.
Existing underground transport networks, such
as low-carbon train and metro lines, enable the
broadband cabling network to be upgraded
and extended. Business models are redefined
There is asymmetry between the
dynamism of technological innovation
and the political and institutional
support necessary to spread the
benefits of innovation throughout the
economy and society.
Elisabeth Grosdhomme
Managing Director of Paradigmes et
caetera
19
20. and unconventional collaborations emerge.
Infrastructure investment follows the proliferation
of green tech solutions to facilitate their greater
take-up. Multiple modes of low-carbon transport
form part of a circular and pro-environmental
economy. Benefits are achieved across sectors
using artificial intelligence (AI), making homes
smarter, dramatically reducing waste and
increasing efficiency across urban services.
Sharing economy apps help reduce material
consumption at the household level, energy
consumption in buildings is actively optimised, and
waste is sorted with the help of AI technology.
But the rush to support the high-tech economy
comes at the expense of investment in wider
infrastructure and other traditional sectors and
urban services. As automation and AI displace
overqualified but ill-equipped labour, a section
of the middle-class becomes unemployable.
Traditional industries face an existential threat
to integrate new technologies or perish.
Citizens grow anxious of their future prospects.
Even as Paris becomes the world leader
in green technology innovation, the divide
increases between the digital and economic
haves and have-nots. While economic
recovery and growth post-COVID-19 pulls
the City of Paris into a new economic reality,
other areas in the metropole are slower to
evolve. Boosting education and skills becomes
increasingly critical, although a comprehensive
strategy to address the disparity is slow to
appear. By 2030, tensions increase between
the younger generation that has adapted and
thrived in the new economy and the older
generation whose skillset and employment lag
behind. Tensions also increase between the
wealthier and poorer departments.
The prosperity created by green technology
evolution leads to introspection and
the recognition that these tensions must
be addressed if Paris is to continue to
prosper. Digitalisation is already leading to
democratisation in the deployment of and
access to urban services, be they efficient
waste collection, smart buildings or low-carbon
transport. A wide-ranging infrastructure upgrade
programme is launched to support low-carbon
choices and enhance life for citizens, consumers
and businesses. Digital solutions continue
to develop and proliferate alongside this
infrastructure programme, across the range of
urban energy, transport, housing, waste and
water services. Tensions are further defused
as the government initiates education and
retraining initiatives to support more of the
local population in the start-up and scale-up
revolution. A generation of blue-collar workers
shifts to the new economy.
Bridging to carbon neutrality
By 2040, Paris leads the green economy
evolution in France and across the world.
Prosperity spills out from Paris, with the outer
Paris Metropole starting to catch up. However,
in this technology-led scenario, the level of
coordination required to achieve the 2050
carbon-neutral objective is only beginning
to emerge in 2040. Without concrete
decarbonisation targets and government
coordination, innovation is more diffused and
less focused on the energy transition. Moreover,
the uneven pace of innovation across different
parts of the metropole means that there is still
work to do to decarbonise, and inequality
remains a key barrier to a just and equitable
transition. Nevertheless, the Green Tech
Evolution builds momentum and the beginnings
of an inclusive and thoughtful transition begin
to emerge by 2040. With greater coordination
across the Paris Metropole, on both climate
action and for all to share in the benefits of the
Green Tech Evolution, the Paris Metropole
moves on-track to meet its 2050 carbon
neutrality goal.
20
21. Given the current biodiversity crisis and
our understanding of the links between
climate and green infrastructure, this
scenario assumes that green start-ups will
develop solutions that tackle both climate
and biodiversity issues. Will that be
effective?
Perrine Hamel
Natural Capital Project, USA and Centre
International de Recherche sur Environnement et
Développement (CIRED), France.
21
23. THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE PARIS METROPOLE
The COVID-19 pandemic lingers far longer
than expected. The slow economic recovery
does little to improve unemployment levels,
and bankruptcies become inevitable.
Temporary unemployment schemes are
repeatedly extended. Bailouts are issued to
small and medium-sized businesses in traditional
industries, while previously planned reforms,
such as those on pensions, are reversed.
The resultant debt burden and limited real signs
of economic recovery lead to rising distrust of
government for its perceived failure in dealing
with the crisis. Citizens’ anger also turns towards
outsiders and immigrants, as well as to public
institutions. Protests and disruption increase,
particularly by marginalised residents. Longer-
term policy decisions are placed on hold, as
immediate social and economic problems take
centre stage in the national policy debate.
Policymakers’ efforts to manage the pandemic
have uneven results. The poorer areas are hit
worst, both in terms of health outcomes and
economic impact.
THE BLAME GAME: KEY ATTRIBUTES
Q The impact of COVID-19 lingers, both in health and economic terms, and mistrust in
government and institutions rises. Poorer areas are hit hardest.
Q The 2020s are a turbulent time. Longer-term decisions are placed on hold as
immediate social and economic problems take centre stage. Policies are reactive
and their results uneven. A sustained economic recovery remains elusive.
Q The focus is on restarting the economy, rather than supporting the energy transition.
Government policies benefit traditional industries and jobs, with little attention to
climate change.
Q The impact of severe weather events on poorer areas highlights inaction and
inequality. Climate injustice, as well as energy access and affordability, are
growing problems that lead to anger and the beginning of activism-led action.
Q Radical new policies and public-private partnerships start late and are challenging,
but the 2040s begin a carbon-neutral renaissance for the Paris Metropole. There is
still a long way to go – however, momentum and a region-wide approach mean
climate neutrality is achievable beyond 2050.
23
24. THE BLAME GAME
The 2020s is a turbulent economic, social
and political time, with no clear leadership or
direction provided by government, business
or civil society. The focus is on restarting
the economy, rather than accelerating the
energy transition or addressing inequality.
Government funding and fiscal support schemes
benefit traditional industries and jobs. But little
attention is given to climate change, domestically
or globally. Security measures are introduced to
prevent violent protests from recurring, especially
in the poorest departments. Growth does
pick up, but in fits and starts, and a sustained
economic recovery remains elusive. Policies are
reactive, and measures to address systemic
racism and inequality lose focus and momentum.
By the late-2020s, increasingly frequent summer
droughts and heatwaves cause alarm about
the metropole’s ability to safeguard the poorest
and most vulnerable; reports of deaths among
the elderly create fear and anger. The initial
wave of government funding provides more
amenities to help citizens cope with the effects
of extreme weather events such as flooding
and heatwaves. Yet with little focus on climate
change mitigation, energy consumption from air
conditioning increases greenhouse gas emissions.
Funding levels are too low. Government finances,
severely strained by the pandemic, are yet to
recover. Community-led social provisions become
more noticeable across the Paris Metropole.
As climate events become more frequent, impact
is especially severe for vulnerable segments of
society that lack savings or suffer from underlying
health problems. As anger mobilises people, they
demand action.
Climate injustice becomes the proxy for wider
economic and social injustices. The importance
of making the Paris Metropole climate-resilient
rises in profile and popularity. Redirecting their
anger, citizens blame large companies,
accusing them of being major emitters.
In the 2030s, the interests of Paris’s disparate
groups coalesce around the need for urgent
climate action. The tone is one of panic: fast
action needs radical solutions; the policy
debate becomes extreme. Litigation becomes
a central theme in political manifestos.
Political leaders who vie to be the most
aggressive against the establishment enjoy
electoral success. These politicians ban non-
essential polluting transport and place high
taxes on polluting industries. An overhaul gets
underway in Paris Metropole; initiatives include
the electrification of the transport sector, clean
power generation, caps on international flights
and the compulsory refurbishment of non-
compliant buildings. The complete overhaul
requires the rerouting of tramlines, tunnels
and other transport links. The Paris Metropole
faces huge disruption as the power grid,
streets, water infrastructure, digital cabling and
green spaces are all affected by infrastructure
development projects.
This is achieved through public-private
partnerships, with the Paris government using
its fiscal levers and balance sheet to stimulate
...Infrastructures are based on a ‘risk
as usual’ design philosophy; the
opposite of what a truly resilience-led
planning policy might require.”
Raphaël Languillon-Aussel
Senior Study Officer at La Fabrique de la
Cité, France, and Senior Lecturer at the
University of Geneva, Switzerland
24
25. private investment. Measures taken include
issuing green bonds and using innovative green
financing instruments to raise private capital
for large infrastructure and other projects.
This approach is justified with the arguments that
“it’s a climate emergency” and that a large-scale
infrastructural overhaul “will create economic
growth”. Despite the already huge debt burdens,
additional government spending is paid for by
raising taxes and borrowing. Companies face
increasing pressure to act as responsible citizens
and feel compelled to fund parts of these
projects. As the French and global economies
struggle to recover, low interest rates and lack
of other investment opportunities increase the
attractiveness of investing in these projects.
This creates tension between generations as the
young object to borrowing against resources
they need for their future. Eventually, these
tensions ease as climate-related investments
future-proof the city for generations.
Despite the turmoil of the 2020s and the
huge upheaval of the 2030s, Paris in 2040 is
once more attracting new visitors and people
wishing to move there. The city is more liveable,
peaceful and green. Fresh air and low noise
levels make it an attractive work, investment and
home environment. The region is once again
a magnet for industry, innovation, tourism and
creativity. However, only the wealthy can afford
to live there.
Bridging to carbon neutrality
Fortunately, spill-over effects from the growth
and prosperity of the City of Paris start to have
a positive effect on the wider Paris Metropole
area. Infrastructure expansion continues into
the Paris Metropole too, where green space,
public transport and new digital technologies
are deployed for last-mile, on-demand transport.
Green, lower-carbon islands appear across the
metropole. Growth slowly shifts from being reliant
on government actions and incentives to being
business and market-driven. In order to achieve
its goal of carbon neutrality, the metropole
needs to remain focused in the 2040s on driving
prosperity beyond the City of Paris and into
regions that have suffered decades of economic
and social hardship. Bridging the difference
between the haves and have-nots will require
a region-wide approach and redistributive
policies, with wealthier communes funding their
neighbours’ transition. As momentum builds,
everyone benefits and beyond 2050 the Paris
Metropole moves towards climate neutrality.
25
27. THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE PARIS METROPOLE
In 2019, polls12
showed that the French consider
climate change a top concern, including a
recognition that climate events impact society
unequally. The COVID-19 pandemic amplified
these social injustices. Deep inequalities left
disproportionately large groups of citizens
unemployed and suffering from both health and
economic repercussions in the poorest Parisian
suburbs. The depth and inequity of the crisis
led to a period of self-reflection in the French
capital that profoundly influenced grassroots
movements. Local mayors called for a new
post-pandemic world, one that would prioritise
community health and well-being over an
immediate economic bounce-back.
PAVING THE WAY: KEY ATTRIBUTES
Q COVID-19 exacerbates issues of inequality and social injustice across the Paris
Metropole and sparks a period of self-reflection for citizens.
Q Local issues drive community-led action in the 2020s. Local leaders seek
comprehensive ways to generate sustainable economic growth.
Q Climate change remains on the political agenda, but action is initially fragmented
and concentrated in the wealthiest departments.
Q Disparity across departments – in reducing emissions and in resilience to climate
impacts – leads to greater emphasis on a grassroots governance model.
Increased cooperation and sharing best practice help to reduce emissions and
make steady, inclusive progress to address climate change.
Q The Paris Metropole takes a global leadership position in the 2040s based on its
success in forging a fair energy transition for all. The metropole is clearly on the way
to achieving its 2050 targets.
27
28. PAVING THE WAY
Domestic businesses lead the economic recovery,
as international supply chains remain disrupted in
the early 2020s. Domestic demand is increasingly
met by domestic supply, with French businesses
prospering. At the local level, public bodies are
mandated to set their own budgets and policies.
As the Parisian debate on inequalities grows, so
too do the calls by empowered local government
officials to include redistributive mechanisms to
ensure better health and more jobs for the poorest
departments. These complex local problems
are addressed in public debates and citizens’
assemblies. Representatives from local government,
business, citizens and academia seek thoughtful
and comprehensive policies to generate long-term
economic growth and better healthcare. By the
early 2030s, localised action has significantly
increased and improved citizens’ well-being.
This Île-de-France archipelago,
made up of socioeconomic
inequalities in lifestyles and housing
density, has repercussions for the
climate: the rich want to be virtuous,
but the costs for the less well-off are
difficult to bear.
Julien Damon
Sociologist and Associate Professor
at the Paris Institute of Political Studies,
France
28
29. Alongside the emergence of a grassroots
governance model, questions of climate
change and decarbonisation remain on the
political agenda, particularly in the wealthiest
departments. It remains a cause among
cosmopolitan urbanites, but the climate impacts
are increasingly being felt by all. In the mayoral
campaigns of the wealthiest departments,
candidates vie to outdo one another with
climate ambitions. Several emissions-reduction
schemes emerge, which are showcased
at the Olympic and Paralympic Games in
2024, the first carbon-neutral Olympics.
Olympic venues in Paris Metropole, such as
those in Saint-Ouen and Saint-Denis, invest in
green infrastructure and carbon-neutral venues;
while the inner city increases pedestrian spaces,
and creates bicycle lanes and car-free areas.
A smartphone app connects users to multiple
modes of mobility – trains, electric vehicles,
e-scooters and other forms of public transport.
These policies and technologies coincide
with the Paris mayor’s aspiration to create a
“15-minute city” in which all residents live within
15 minutes walking or cycling of their daily
activities. But the lower-income departments
and regions lack the resources to make such
changes. While there is better collaboration
between Paris Metropole cities, the energy
transition moves forward at two different
speeds: faster uptake in the wealthier regions
and a slower or stationary response in the
poorer regions.
Electrification soon becomes the most dominant
form of green infrastructure, particularly in
reducing the environmental impact of urban
transport. Multiple solutions are tested for last-
mile delivery to combat pollution and improve
the efficiency and use of public transport
systems. On-demand transport, mobility hubs
and e-bikes, all fuelled by electricity from
renewable and other zero-carbon sources,
provide citizens with new and diverse transport
29
30. alternatives. Early and rapid deployment of
hydrogen as a fuel source is a critical part of
the solution to decarbonise heavy road and
river freight transport. Cities and municipalities,
in particular, argue the co-benefits of less
noise, reduced air pollution and lower carbon
emissions when implementing radical green
policy changes.
Paris Metropole’s aging housing stock is difficult
to decarbonise. However, new regulations are
introduced to improve insulation in buildings,
and targets are set to decarbonise district
heating networks. Since wealthier departments
with older housing stock are the primary source
of building emissions, this is a big step towards
the Paris Climate Action Plan target of 1 million
buildings thermally renovated and made more
energy efficient by 2050.
Even though the grassroots governance model
has delivered significant benefits for the worst
off, their gains are modest compared to the
best off. This disparity has increased during
the 2020s and becomes more apparent in
the 2030s as climate impacts, in the form of
extreme weather events such as heat waves
and flooding, become more frequent.
There is an increasing recognition of the
need and opportunity to build on the success
of the grassroots governance model to
address climate change, for the benefit of
all. Communes across the Paris Metropole
start to come together. Construction subsidies
for transport infrastructure projects link the
industrial hubs to more deprived urban areas.
Gradually, best practice – e.g. to improve the
energy efficiency of buildings and decarbonise
heating – is shared between the metropole’s
communes. The transport and construction
sectors become a new source of blue-collar
jobs in some areas, as does improving the
energy efficiency of homes. Given the capital-
intensive nature of these projects and modest
recovery of government finances following the
pandemic, tough decisions are made to redirect
funds from elsewhere to support infrastructure
30
31. and decarbonisation projects across the
Paris Metropole. This leads increasingly
to the formation of new public-private
partnerships to fund these expensive projects.
These partnerships give rise to objections
initially, but prove invaluable in enabling the
projects’ construction.
As the transport networks reach further into the
regions, they provide much-needed access
to commuters. The increasingly connected
Paris Metropole opens up new employment
opportunities and enables collaboration,
education and retraining. At the same time,
fundamental changes occur in other sectors of
the Paris economy, such as in the motor industry.
As it electrifies, the industry grapples with how
to equip workers with the skills required for
future employment and the transition from old to
new jobs. However, the enhanced grassroots
and community-led governance model is well
placed to manage this transition.
In the second half of the 2030s, the cities of
the Paris Metropole begin to set up ambitious
projects together to increase biodiversity and
remove greenhouse gases. The metropole
in 2040 is an exemplar among other
metropolitan areas. It has taken significant
steps to go carbon-neutral in a way that is fair
and equitable. It hosted the first carbon-neutral
Olympics and Paralympics in history and now
provides electrified transport services to its
citizens and visitors.
The metropole is a more pleasant city to live
in. There are more green spaces. Buildings are
energy-efficient and comfortable. Commuting is
more efficient, as fewer cars are on the road
and most are electric. Industrial hubs and
suburbs are connected to the urban centres.
Blue-collar sectors are once again thriving.
Bridging to carbon neutrality
While the Paris Metropole has made significant
progress towards its carbon-neutral goal, the
complex nature of decarbonising sectors such
as agriculture and aviation becomes apparent.
But the Paris Metropole does not control all
the levers necessary to achieve full carbon
neutrality in these sectors. The metropole
starts working with the national government to
decarbonise agriculture, driving demand for
more environmentally sustainable agricultural
and food products. It works with the European
Union to enhance its rail transport links with the
rest of Europe. It joins with other global cities like
London, New York, Beijing and Tokyo to push
for a step change in the uptake of sustainable
aviation fuels.
The city takes a global leadership position,
based on its successes to date in forging a
comprehensive and just energy transition that
is fair for all, and drives action in the hardest-
to-decarbonise sectors within and beyond the
Paris Metropole.
The Paris Metropole is on a good trajectory to
achieve its 2050 carbon-neutral objective.
31
32. CONCLUSION
The 2018 Paris Climate Action Plan sets
out an ambitious target for an inclusive and
resilient carbon-neutral city, powered entirely
by renewable energy by 2050. While the
scenarios indicate that the Paris Metropole
could be well-positioned to achieve these
objectives, it also faces significant challenges
in becoming carbon-neutral even as it strives
to enhance inclusivity of the transition and
resiliency to climate impacts. Rising levels of
income and wealth inequality, the growing
frequency of extreme weather events, and an
old and inefficient building stock complicate the
task ahead, as does the Île-de-France’s layered
administrative divisions.
But ultimately, the Paris Metropole has an
opportunity to lead climate action at the local,
national and European levels. Given its
association with the 2015 Paris climate
agreement the area has important symbolic value
in efforts to tackle climate change. The City of
Paris has significant influence in the global
movement for local climate action, demonstrated
by its leadership role in the C40 Cities Climate
Leadership Group. Upcoming global events, such
as the 2024 Paris Olympics, represent further
opportunities for the area to build and enhance
its credentials as a beacon for bold climate
action. The journey ahead will not be easy, but
the pay-off could be huge. And the world will be
watching – and learning.
32
33. CITY
SOLUTIONS
Shell City Solutions, part of Shell New
Energies, helps cities around the world
navigate energy transition though integrated
urban solutions that improve urban mobility,
energy and the environment. We work
collaboratively with governments, industry
and society to co-create and test innovative
concepts, technologies and business models.
The Shell City Solutions team draws on global
expertise across Shell and its partners to offer
seamless implementation and deployment.
www.shell.com/citysolutions
Leonard is the innovation and foresight platform set
up by VINCI. We bring together entrepreneurs,
thinkers and experts from different fields to track
emerging trends in VINCI’s business activities and
markets, identify long-term challenges and goals,
pinpoint opportunities for change in the Group’s
businesses and organizational structure, identify
new growth drivers and developing innovative
projects incubation and acceleration programs
open to both Group employees and startups.
These scenarios can be a powerful tool to raise
awareness of the need to act now if Paris is to
achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. We were very
pleased to collaborate with Shell and gather such
an expertise.
leonard.vinci.com
KEY INSIGHTS
Paris Metropole: Becoming
Carbon-Neutral by 2050
Q Align governance at all levels
Q A just transition that is fair for all will be critical
Q Parts of the Paris Metropole that can move
quickly must do so
Q Progress on energy transitions depends on
collaboration across government, society
and business
33
34. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We wish to thank the many people consulted externally in the development of this work.
In particular, we thank our collaboration partners, the OECD, the participants and experts who
attended the workshop, and Vivid Economics for the analysis.
GLOSSARY
ADEME Agency for Ecological Transition, France.
C40 C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group.
COP 21 Twenty-first session of the Conference of the Parties to the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
INSEE National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies, France.
Paris Climate Action Plan Outlines a common future for a carbon‑neutral city by 2050.
PM PM10 are inhalable particles, with diameters that are generally 10
micrometers and smaller; and PM2.5 are fine inhalable particles,
with diameters that are 2.5 micrometers and smaller. Particles less
than 10 micrometers in diameter can penetrate the lungs and even
the bloodstream.
The Habitat III Conference United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable
Urban Development, which took place in Quito, Ecuador, on
October 17‑20, 2016.
Opinions expressed by individuals do not reflect the position of their company.
ENDNOTES
1 C40: Click here for the Link.
2 The Paris Agreement was signed at COP21 in
Paris in 2015 and aims to strengthen the global
response to the threat of climate change.
3 IBM Research Insights, Global Location Trends,
2019: Link.
4 OECD Stat: Link.
5 Emissions data are not available for the Paris
Metropole as defined in this scenarios sketch, so
we use the Île-de-France as a proxy to represent
the current state of emissions for the area.
6 LeasePlan, EV Readiness Index 2020: Link.
7 INSEE, Statistiques locales – Répartition des actifs
occupés selon le moyen de transport utilisé pour
se rendre au travail, 2017: Link.
8 See note 6
9 INSEE, Analyses Ile-de-France: Se chauffer en Ile-
de-France: la petite taille des logements atténue
le cout d’une performance énergétique médiocre,
figure 1, 2018 : Link.
10 Données de l’année 2018, Principaux résultats,
OLAP, 2018.
11 Enquête TREMI, Travaux de Rénovation
Energétique des Maisons Individuelles, campagne
2017, ADEME, 2017: Link.
12 Ipsos and Sopra Steria institutes on French
people’s concerns, 2019.
34
35. 35
On July 6, 2017, Paris published the new Climate Action Plan
outlining its goal for carbon neutrality by 2050. We believe
meeting this goal will be extremely challenging but possible.
This report is not intended to be proscriptive; there are other
pathways for the Paris Metropole to follow in reaching its target.
This sketch, which is a collaboration between Leonard and
Shell, contains insights from Shell’s new Scenarios Sketch “Paris
Metropole: Becoming Carbon Neutral by 2050”. The New
Lens Scenarios and Scenario Sketches are part of an ongoing
process used in Shell for 50 years to challenge executives’
perspectives on the future business environment.
Scenarios don’t describe what will happen, or what should
happen, rather they explore what could happen. We base
them on plausible assumptions and quantification, and they are
designed to stretch management’s thinking and even to consider
events that may only be remotely possible. Scenarios, therefore,
are not intended to be predictions of likely future events or
outcomes or a strategy. Investors should not rely on them when
making an investment decision with regard to Royal Dutch Shell
plc securities.
It is important to note that the suggestions contained in this
report are those to be taken by the Paris Metropole, and
not necessarily Shell. While Shell is supportive of the Paris
Metropole target of carbon neutrality by 2050, our current
business plan is not consistent with the proposed EU target.
However, as announced on April 16, 2020, Shell aims to be a
net-zero emissions energy business by 2050. Accordingly, we
expect that over time our business plan will change as society
and our customers move toward meeting the goals of the
Paris Agreement.
The companies in which Royal Dutch Shell plc directly and
indirectly owns investments are separate legal entities. In this
sketch “Shell”, “Shell Group” and “Royal Dutch Shell” are
sometimes used for convenience where references are made to
Royal Dutch Shell plc and its subsidiaries in general. Likewise,
the words “we”, “us” and “our” are also used to refer to Royal
Dutch Shell plc and its subsidiaries in general or to those who
work for them. These terms are also used where no useful
purpose is served by identifying the particular entity or entities.
This “Paris Metropole: Becoming Carbon Neutral by 2050”
scenarios sketch contains forward-looking statements that
may affect Shell’s financial condition, results of operations,
and businesses of Royal Dutch Shell. All statements other
than statements of historical fact are, or may be deemed to
be, forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements
are statements of future expectations that are based on
management’s current expectations and assumptions and
involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that
could cause actual results, performance or events to differ
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Forward-looking statements include, among other things,
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that could affect the future operations of Royal Dutch Shell
and could cause those results to differ materially from those
expressed in the forward-looking statements included in this
sketch including (without limitation): (a) price fluctuations in
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results; (e) reserves estimates; (f) loss of market share and
industry competition; (g) environmental and physical risks; (h)
risks associated with the identification of suitable potential
acquisition properties and targets, and successful negotiation
and completion of such transactions; (i) the risk of doing business
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including regulatory measures addressing climate change; (k)
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and regions; (l) political risks, including the risks of expropriation
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entities, delays or advancements in the approval of projects
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All forward-looking statements contained in this sketch are
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contained or referred to in this section. Readers should not place
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factors that may affect future results are contained in Royal
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(available at www.shell.com/investor and www.sec.gov).
These risk factors also expressly qualify all forward-looking
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the reader. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of
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