2017
DOI: 10.3390/su9020212
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Experimenting with Law and Governance for Decentralized Electricity Systems: Adjusting Regulation to Reality?

Abstract: Moving towards a low-carbon society calls not only for technological innovation, but also for new modes of governance. However, the current legal framework of the electricity sector, and the modes of governance that it establishes, impede innovation in the sector. To overcome this obstacle, in 2015 the Dutch government adopted a Crown decree for experiments with decentralized renewable electricity generation (Experimentation Decree) with the aim to generate insights on how to adjust the legal framework. The qu… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…When it comes to experimentation, however, the national government, in the case of the Netherlands, did show a proactive regulatory response. It succeeded in creating the conditions under which experiments with decentralized energy supply (even involving a vast number of GIs) could be undertaken, i.e., by formal 'policy experiments,' 'Green Deals,' the 'IPIN' program and the Experimentation Decree as reported by Lammers & Diestelmeier [24]. Despite their restrictions, these experiments gave room to stakeholders to learn about niche and business case development of decentralized energy innovation and related legal and governance challenges.…”
Section: Multiple Levels Of Governancementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…When it comes to experimentation, however, the national government, in the case of the Netherlands, did show a proactive regulatory response. It succeeded in creating the conditions under which experiments with decentralized energy supply (even involving a vast number of GIs) could be undertaken, i.e., by formal 'policy experiments,' 'Green Deals,' the 'IPIN' program and the Experimentation Decree as reported by Lammers & Diestelmeier [24]. Despite their restrictions, these experiments gave room to stakeholders to learn about niche and business case development of decentralized energy innovation and related legal and governance challenges.…”
Section: Multiple Levels Of Governancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The discussion is taken further by Lammers and Diestelmeier, who focus on the energy initiatives' collective decentralized production [24] and by Saintier, who investigates the rise of Community Interest Companies, defined as 'consumers and local actors' collectives,' in the United Kingdom [25]. Saintier points out that the motivation of the UK government to support such initiatives 'is the non-commercial nature of such local actors and the hope that their involvement will combat NIMBYism' [25].…”
Section: Disruptive (Supply-side) Architectural Innovationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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