Which heating system do you use?
With the colder weather brought by the autumn and winter months, the energy needs of households are drastically increasing. For many citizens, the heating season, in addition to the imperatives of heating an apartment or house and maintaining comfort, also brings increased financial challenges. It is estimated that household heating costs account for about 10% of total costs.
In the last couple of years, we are more and more aware that with the beginning of the heating season, there is an increased air pollution. Official data unequivocally indicate that air pollution in cities across Serbia is primarily related to the way households are heated
How to heat your homes in a way to maintain comfort and good room temperature; we can pay the bills; do we reduce or completely eliminate air pollution?
It seems that the citizens, in this situation, are faced with solving a very complicated equation.
Join us in the conversation about whether there are shortcuts on the way to achieving this goal, as well as how to jointly solve the complicated equation of household heating, and having a clean number and not being in the red.
Monday, Jan. 18 at 5 p.m
In 60 minutes of the webinar, leading experts in Serbia will talk about these and other topics:
Aleksandar Macura, Program Director, RES Foundation
Slobodan Jerotić, director, JKP "Toplana Sabac"
Moderator: Ognjan Pantić, project coordinator, Belgrade Open School
Registration is required HERE, and after registration by email you will receive all access data.
The Belgrade Open School will implement a series of webinars dedicated to the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals until February 2021.
The “SDGs for All” Platform is supported by Swiss Government and the German Development Cooperation and implemented by GIZ, within the project “Public Finance Reform – 2030 Agenda”. The project partners are the Belgrade Open School, the Belgrade Fund for Political Excellence, the Center for Advanced Economic Studies, the Ana and Vlade Divac Foundation, the Center for Democracy Foundation and the Timok Youth Center.
The “SDGs for All” Platform enables a broad discussion among the Serbia’s non-state actors, including civil society, corporate sector, academic and research community, media and the citizens, on aligning Serbia’s development priorities within the objectives of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Photo source: Freepik.com