Each intake has its own application route. We show official links so you can verify and apply confidently.
Check if your qualifications meet this program's admission requirements.
This is based on the Climate, Energy & Carbon Economics Future Field and its subfields (not program‑specific promises). Use the official program page for curriculum details.
Why this field matters
Climate tech, renewable energy, carbon economics, and sustainability
Career outcomes snapshot
A quick, visual overview of common outcomes in this field (roles + paths + subfields). It’s field-level context — not a promise for this specific program.
Roles
6
Paths
6
Subfields
2
Top roles
Typical paths
Subfields
Looking for a Master's in Climate, Energy & Carbon Economics? Compare intakes above and verify curriculum details on the official programme page.
A–F framework evaluation • Each score is backed by evidence
6-dimension future-readiness evaluation
Future relevance
Is this program connected to fast-growing careers?
Based on this program's field (Climate, Energy & Carbon Economics), curriculum structure, and institution profile. How we score →
Tech & data strength
Will you build strong technical skills (data, software, AI tools)?
“You will have adequate skills to become influential in non-profit organisations or expert authorities, as well as to work in a company dealing with new sustainable ways of producing food in different settings, e.g.”
View sourcePeople skills
Does it build communication, teamwork, and leadership?
“Using case studies and field experience the programme also covers the complexity and potential mulitfunctionality of land use, and explores interdisciplinary solutions to problems in the current food system.”
View sourcePractical learning
Do you learn by doing (projects, labs, real-world work)?
“Using case studies and field experience the programme also covers the complexity and potential mulitfunctionality of land use, and explores interdisciplinary solutions to problems in the current food system.”
View sourceInnovation & entrepreneurship
Does it support innovation, startups, or building new things?
Based on this program's field (Climate, Energy & Carbon Economics), curriculum structure, and institution profile. How we score →
Global & ethical impact
Does it cover sustainability, ethics, and global perspective?
“You will have adequate skills to become influential in non-profit organisations or expert authorities, as well as to work in a company dealing with new sustainable ways of producing food in different settings, e.g.”
View sourceHow we calculate these scores
Our A–F framework evaluates programs across 6 dimensions of future-readiness. Scores combine: field alignment (how the program's field connects to growing industries), curriculum signals (keywords, course structure, learning outcomes), and institution profile (research focus, industry partnerships). This program has 6 verified citations from official sources.
Learn more about our methodologyMojo can build a personalized shortlist based on your profile. Or talk to a human advisor.
Promise: no sales pressure — just clarity.
Industry insights verified by Mojo
Big-picture context for Climate, Energy & Carbon Economics. These sources show why the field is growing — not specific program details.
Energy jobs growing faster than the overall economy
International Energy Agency • 2024-01-01
Strong investment in energy infrastructure drove a 2.2% rise in energy jobs last year, nearly double the rate of employment growth for the wider global economy.
Read sourceCitations from official sources
You will have adequate skills to become influential in non-profit organisations or expert authorities, as well as to work in a company dealing with new sustainable ways of producing food in different settings, e.g.
View sourceUsing case studies and field experience the programme also covers the complexity and potential mulitfunctionality of land use, and explores interdisciplinary solutions to problems in the current food system.
View sourceUsing case studies and field experience the programme also covers the complexity and potential mulitfunctionality of land use, and explores interdisciplinary solutions to problems in the current food system.
You will have adequate skills to become influential in non-profit organisations or expert authorities, as well as to work in a company dealing with new sustainable ways of producing food in different settings, e.g.
View sourceexperiential, scientific and traditional knowledge and modern technologies in multi-actor collaborations – with the overall aim to facilitate the transition towards more sustainable food systems.
View sourceGraduates can work with public authorities, counselling, teaching and consulting assignments.
View source