Who We Are?

Our Mission

As a response to the threat of climate changes, the European Commission (EC) officially adopted the European Union (EU) Strategy on Adaptation to Climate Change in 2021. The Strategy sets out how the EU can adapt to the unavoidable impacts of climate change and become climate neutral by 2050. In addition to the Strategy, European Green Deal (2019) is also a response to these challenges. The European Green Deal is part of the strategy of the EC for the implementation of the United Nation’s 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and aims to transform the EU into a prosperous society, with a modern, resource-efficient, and competitive economy, which will have no net GHG emissions in 2050 and where economic growth is separate from resource use. In order to achieve this goal, the Green deal predicts a 90% reduction in transport-related greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Particularly, The European Commission proposes more ambitious targets for reducing the CO2 emissions of new cars and vans: 55% reduction of emissions from cars by 2030, 50% reduction of emissions from vans by 2030, 0 emissions from new cars by 2035.

Electric mobility (EM), and in general low-carbon mobility, is one of the main targets of the European Union’s policies dedicated to a green transition. EU policies is a promotion of sustainable mobility, and EM in particular. The European Union has long identified EM, in the wider context of sustainable mobility, as one of the priorities for the decarburization of transport in all Member States. EM has considered as a key transition to overcome the fossil fuel dependency of the EU’s transport systems.

In accordance with the undertaken initiatives and strategies, the process of EM based on renewable energy sources and the replacement of dirty technologies in the transport system is progressing in the EU countries. At the same time, the level of air pollution is increasing in the WB countries due to the increase in the number of old fossil-fuel powered vehicles. Important factors that contribute to the behavioral change in order to adopt the concept of EM are solving the issues of the lack of infrastructures’ availability, attitudes and skepticism of the general public and, more broadly, the lack of awareness among public and private sector and citizens in general regarding the EM. In the light of this, insufficient availability of the appropriate infrastructure and the poor user awareness are considered as the key barriers to be addressed.

OBJECTIVES

1. To improve and develop the existing curricula for undergraduate and master studies in accordance with Bologna requirements and national accreditation standards by implementing new courses in the field of EM.  Indicators for measuring achievement: 10 developed and implemented EM curricula (3 in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 3 in Kosovo*, 2 in Montenegro, 2 in Albania). The modernized/new EM curricula will precisely define the teachers’ competencies, learning outcomes, course content and syllabi.

2. Establish 10 new EM laboratories in the Western Balkans with necessary equipment for practical EM lectures.

 3. Create 10 EM associations involving stakeholders to promote EM awareness through workshops, demonstrations, and campaigns. Key goals include organizing workshops, developing action plans, and conducting Green Weeks in WB higher education institutions.

E-mobility Alliance

Action Plan for Electro Mobility Curriculum Development

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