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An important aim behind the restructuring of Germany's and Europe's
electricity systems is to reduce the environmental burden,
especially with respect to greenhouse gas emissions, of the current
systems. Emissions must be brought down to a level that is
sustainable in the long run and consistent with greenhouse gas
emission reduction goals. Meeting these goals will require a system
(as best as current knowledge suggests) that will be able to cope
simultaneously with the fundamental demands for economic
efficiency, environmental sustainability and supply security.
Making use of existing scenarios, this study sketches such a
system. It focuses in particular on auxiliary systems such as
energy storage methods and network extensions.
The study introduces technologies that can balance electricity in
energy systems and that can serve as enabling technologies for the
integration of large quantities of renewable energies in the power
supply system. It begins with a discussion of normative aims for
the future electricity system before continuing with a description
of current policies and political developments and an overview of
relevant existing energy system studies. These sections serve as
background for the remainder of the study. They are followed by
discussion and analysis of the growing demand for means to balance
the fluctuations found in electricity generated in power systems
with a high penetration of renewable energies, the potentials of
diverse technologies, requirements for electrical networks,
economic impacts and important legal issues. Finally, the main
challenges to the achievement of developing balancing technologies
and processes for renewable electricity-dominant systems are
summarised and recommendations made.
An important aim behind the restructuring of Germany's and Europe's
electricity systems is to reduce the environmental burden,
especially with respect to greenhouse gas emissions, of the current
systems. Emissions must be brought down to a level that is
sustainable in the long run and consistent with greenhouse gas
emission reduction goals. Meeting these goals will require a system
(as best as current knowledge suggests) that will be able to cope
simultaneously with the fundamental demands for economic
efficiency, environmental sustainability and supply security.
Making use of existing scenarios, this study sketches such a
system. It focuses in particular on auxiliary systems such as
energy storage methods and network extensions.
The study introduces technologies that can balance electricity in
energy systems and that can serve as enabling technologies for the
integration of large quantities of renewable energies in the power
supply system. It begins with a discussion of normative aims for
the future electricity system before continuing with a description
of current policies and political developments and an overview of
relevant existing energy system studies. These sections serve as
background for the remainder of the study. They are followed by
discussion and analysis of the growing demand for means to balance
the fluctuations found in electricity generated in power systems
with a high penetration of renewable energies, the potentials of
diverse technologies, requirements for electrical networks,
economic impacts and important legal issues. Finally, the main
challenges to the achievement of developing balancing technologies
and processes for renewable electricity-dominant systems are
summarised and recommendations made.
The Research Network on EU Administrative Law (ReNEUAL) was
established in 2009 and now comprises well over one hundred
scholars and practitioners active in the field of EU and
comparative public law. The aim of the network is to contribute to
the development of a legal framework in which the constitutional
values of the EU can be embedded in the exercise of public
authority. Drafted by four working groups addressing the main
aspects of EU administrative procedure, the ReNEUAL Model Rules
offer a toolkit for European and domestic authorities seeking to
regulate administrative action, reinforcing general principles of
EU law and identifying, on the basis of comparative research, best
practices in different specific policies of the EU. The book
includes an extended introduction chapter, followed by the Model
Rules, which are organised into six parts. Part I addresses general
issues concerning the scope of the Model Rules and their relation
to existing rules in EU legislation and Member State law; Part II
is concerned with rulemaking by EU institutions, bodies, offices,
and agencies; Part III focuses on single case decision-making by EU
institutions, bodies, offices, and agencies; Part IV addresses
contracts of EU institutions, bodies, offices, and agencies; Part V
discusses mutual assistance between administrations; and Part VI
addresses inter-administrative information management.
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