2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jup.2016.03.002
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The German Energiewende – What's happening? Introducing the special issue

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Cited by 63 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…We limit the scope of our explorative study to the This is the authors' post-print of: Rogge, K.S. and German Energiewende because of its ambitious targets and rich policy mix as well as its pioneering role in renewable energy innovation (Bruns et al, 2011;Pegels and Lütkenhorst, 2014;Quitzow et al, 2016;Strunz, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We limit the scope of our explorative study to the This is the authors' post-print of: Rogge, K.S. and German Energiewende because of its ambitious targets and rich policy mix as well as its pioneering role in renewable energy innovation (Bruns et al, 2011;Pegels and Lütkenhorst, 2014;Quitzow et al, 2016;Strunz, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lines connecting the various boxes depict potential relationships between the respective organisations or actors. It should be noted that the federal government stipulates important laws such as the Renewable Energy Act (EEG), which provides feed-in tariffs for renewables, as well as the Federal Building Act (BauGB), which determines the requirements for building facilities outside cities and towns [32,33]. At the same time, the individual German states enjoy their own particular competencies regarding energy and climate policy, e.g.…”
Section: Saxony and The Regional Planning Association In Focusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The greatest changes in Germany happened in the last 10 years: Variations in the structure of electricity production are the results of fundamental changes in the framework conditions. Beside (1) impulses from changes on the market for fossil fuels, (2) environmental and energy policies on the international as well as European level, (3) changes in political targets on the national level, (4) R&D activities, and (5) developments on industrial and society levels have impacted the transformation of the electricity system (see, e.g., [23,30,74]). Figure 4 shows events on the landscape level (e.g., oil crises, nuclear accidents) which are usually mentioned as examples for events with significant impact on the German energy system and as key characteristics of the modified regime (see, e.g., [30]).…”
Section: Disturbances Of the Regimementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Usually, the Fukushima disaster in the year 2011 is mentioned as the turning point for German energy policy (see, e.g., [79]) and [74]). However, the starting point of restructuring the German energy system towards a low-carbon one was set in the years before by implementing the "German Energy Concept" (see, e.g., [64]).…”
Section: Destabilization Of the Role Of Coal-fired Plants In The Regimementioning
confidence: 99%