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Urban Lifestyles Within 1.5 Degrees – Results of the Interreg CE NiCE and the EU 1.5-Degree Lifestyles Projects

2026.03.13.

On February 27, 2026, the Department of Environmental Economics and Sustainability at BME hosted a professional conference addressing the most pressing issues of urban sustainability. The event aimed to share the knowledge accumulated during the Interreg CE NiCE and the EU 1.5-Degree Lifestyles projects, highlighting that achieving global climate goals is inconceivable without a radical transformation of urban consumption patterns.

The conference was opened by Attila Buzási, Head of Department (BME), Béla Janky, Vice-Dean (BME GTK), and Béla Hegyesi (Interreg CE National Contact Point), who all emphasized the role of international cooperation in developing local solutions.

The lecture series was opened by Gabriella Kiss (Corvinus University of Budapest), who presented the experiences of the “Degrowth Doughnut” model’s participatory process in Budapest. Her presentation shed light on the fact that overcoming the contradiction between economic growth and environmental sustainability requires new, community-based approaches. She was followed by Edina Vadovics (GreenDependent Institute), who detailed the quantified results of the EU 1.5-Degree Lifestyles project, making it clear how much individual and systemic emission reduction is necessary to meet the Paris Agreement targets.

Researchers from BME focused on the local level: Noémi Csigéné Nagypál and Zsófia Torma demonstrated the possibilities of a circular lifestyle through a specific district-level example, while Mariann Szabó and Dorottya Vincze summarized the lessons of the NiCE project, posing the question: is it even possible to live truly sustainably in a Hungarian city today?

In the second half of the conference, the focus shifted to interactive knowledge sharing, where discussions continued in four separate working groups. In the municipal and urban development section, led by Gábor Ballabás and Mariann Szabó, decision-makers and experts analysed the circular management of green spaces, composting programs, and the success of Repair Cafe initiatives. They concluded that while public awareness-raising has begun, financing and the reduction of single-use products remain serious challenges for municipalities.

Parallel to this, in the business group moderated by Noémi Csigéné Nagypál and Zsófia Torma, representatives from innovative companies such as Take Easy Energy and CAM Consulting held discussions. The conversation focused on energy efficiency, green marketing, and the lack of legal regulation for energy communities, highlighting the importance of intergenerational knowledge transfer in awareness-shifting.

Representatives of the policy and civil sphere, led by Edina Vadovics and Kristóf Vadovics, identified barriers to systemic change. The group concluded that transition is extremely difficult within a consumption-oriented capitalist model, especially due to low social trust and a lack of political commitment. They emphasized that existing good practices should be elevated from their “niche” status into the mainstream through more powerful communication.

Finally, in the university students’ section led by Attila Buzási and Dorottya Vincze, young participants discussed the dilemmas of food consumption, housing, and mobility. They highlighted the inequalities between urban and rural areas and the power of social media to shape opinions, which could be crucial for making sustainable lifestyles a trend.

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