@techreport{JRC112769, number = {KJ-NA-29427-EN-N (online)}, address = {Luxembourg (Luxembourg)}, issn = {1831-9424 (online)}, year = {2018}, author = {Ciscar Martinez JC and Ibarreta Ruiz D and Soria Ramirez A and Dosio A and Toreti A and Ceglar A and Fumagalli D and Dentener F and Lecerf R and Zucchini A and Panarello L and Niemeyer S and Perez Dominguez I and Fellmann T and Kitous A and Després J and Christodoulou A and Demirel H and Alfieri L and Dottori F and Vousdoukas M and Mentaschi L and Voukouvalas E and Cammalleri C and Marinho Ferreira Barbosa P and Micale F and Vogt J and Barredo Cano JI and Caudullo G and Mauri A and De Rigo D and Liberta' G and Durrant T and Artes Vivancos T and San-Miguel-Ayanz J and Gosling S and Zaherpour J and De Roo A and Bisselink B and Bernhard J and Bianchi A and Rózsai M and Szewczyk W and Mongelli I and Feyen L}, isbn = {978-92-79-97218-8 (online)}, publisher = {Publications Office of the European Union}, abstract = {The study assesses how climate change could affect Europe in eleven impact areas. Under a high warming scenario, several climate impacts show a clear geographical north-south divide. Most of the welfare losses, assessed for six impact areas, would be greatly reduced under a 2ᵒC scenario. }, title = {Climate impacts in Europe }, type = {Scientific analysis or review, Damage assessment}, url = {}, doi = {10.2760/93257 (online)