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dc.contributor.authorKAROVA, Rozeta
dc.date.accessioned2012-03-26T07:57:35Z
dc.date.available2012-03-26T07:57:35Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.citationAlphen aan den Rijn, Kluwer Law International, 2012, Energy and Environmental Law & Policy Series, 21en
dc.identifier.isbn9789041138491
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/21294
dc.description.abstractThis book presents the first in-depth analysis of the export of the EU electricity acquits, through the imposition of an EU-type regional electricity market (REM) in SEE within the enlargement process. Among other germane issues, the author discusses the following: the suitability of the European model of electricity markets' liberalization for economies in transition;the use of the Public Services Obligations (PSO) to address the impact of electricity markets liberalization; the use of regulated prices and measures for granting priority rights for cross-border capacity allocation as PSOs; the Court of Justice judgment in Federutility on the sustainability of states' protection of their different types of customers, including the large businesses; the Energy Community as a step towards a Pan-European Energy Community; the effect of simultaneous national electricity markets liberalization and cross-border regional integration of national electricity markets; and the interplay between liberalization policy and reforms and the regulatory tools available to address their impact on provision of public services. The author's proposed rethinking of the public services obligation offers new views on using this tool more effectively and proposes possibilities for its practical implementation through measures such as energy efficiency, allocation of interconnectors' capacity, transparency, addressing the affordability issue and the protection of vulnerable customers. The book is remarkable for its clear analysis of the policy lessons arising from the export of the idea of liberalized energy markets, and will be welcomed by practitioners, officials, academics and others in energy law and policy for its informative and forward-looking overview of the national and cross-border reforms in the Energy Community framework.en
dc.description.tableofcontents-- Figures. -- List of Tables. -- List of Abbreviations. -- Preface. -- Acknowledgements. -- Introduction. -- Part I The Framework. -- Chapter 1 From a Textbook Model to an Incrementally Developing European Model for the Liberalization of Electricity Markets. -- Chapter 2 PSO as a Regulatory Tool to Tackle the Impact of Electricity Market Liberalization. -- Chapter 3 The Power of the Commission in Implementing the Incrementally Developed European Model of Electricity Market Liberalization in Third Countries. -- Part II Analysis of Electricity Market Liberalization in SEE. -- Chapter 4 Implementation of the Incrementally Developed European Model of Electricity Market Liberalization in Third Countries. -- Chapter 5 Rethinking Liberalization through an Analysis of PSO: Is PSO a Useful Tool to Tackle the Impact of Electricity Market Liberalization in the Contracting Parties?. -- Conclusion. -- Appendices. -- Annex I: Market Participants in the Electricity Markets of the Contracting Parties. -- Annex II: Energy Consumption and Supply, and Installed Capacity to Meet Electricity Demand in the Contracting Parties. -- Bibliography. -- Table of Statutes. -- Table of Cases. -- Energy Community Documents.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherKluwer Law Internationalen
dc.titleLiberalization of Electricity Markets and Public Service Obligations in the Energy Communityen
dc.typeBooken
eui.subscribe.skiptrue
dc.description.versionPublished version of EUI PhD thesis, 2011en


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