Enjeux d'évolution des emplois pour la décarbonation des industries grandes consommatrices d'énergie à horizon 2050
Etude/Recherche
Mis en ligne le : 30/03/2026
Developed by ADEME as part of the European LIFE program titled Finance ClimAct, the Sectoral Transition Plan (STP) aim to explore various decarbonization scenarios in order to identify the transformations needed in industrial sectors to achieve a carbon-neutral society. By proposing different scenarios, they enable the development of decarbonization pathways to achieve the greenhouse gas emission reduction targets set by the National Low-Carbon Strategy.
This document summarizes all the key findings resulting from the development of the nine STP carried out by ADEME. It thus provides a consolidated overview of these sector-specific exercises across the 225 sites involved, which account for 11% of France’s GHG emissions. It highlights the common challenges and lessons across these nine sectors, particularly with regard to socioeconomic issues: sovereignty, employment, and, more broadly, industrial policy. Particular attention is paid to shared infrastructure needs—especially energy infrastructure—which are essential (and vary depending on the scenarios) for carrying out investments at the site level.
Developed by ADEME as part of the European LIFE program titled Finance ClimAct, the Sectoral Transition Plan (STP) aim to explore various decarbonization scenarios in order to identify the transformations needed in industrial sectors to achieve a carbon-neutral society. By proposing different scenarios, they enable the development of decarbonization pathways to achieve the greenhouse gas emission reduction targets set by the National Low-Carbon Strategy.
This document summarizes all the key findings resulting from the development of the nine STP carried out by ADEME. It thus provides a consolidated overview of these sector-specific exercises across the 225 sites involved, which account for 11% of France’s GHG emissions. It highlights the common challenges and lessons across these nine sectors, particularly with regard to socioeconomic issues: sovereignty, employment, and, more broadly, industrial policy. Particular attention is paid to shared infrastructure needs—especially energy infrastructure—which are essential (and vary depending on the scenarios) for carrying out investments at the site level.
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