Table of Contents:
  • Part I Energy Transition
  • Klaus Mathis, Sustainability Strategies and the Problem of the Rebound Effect
  • Sebastian Heselhaus, Energy Transition in Law and Economics
  • Julia Hänni, Energy Transition in Switzerland
  • Anna-Alexandra Marhold, The Interplay Between Liberalization and Decarbonization in the European Internal Energy Market for Electricity
  • Felix Ekardt and Jutta Wieding, The Temperature Target of the Paris Agreement and the Forgotten Aspects of a Meaningful Energy Transition
  • Fabrizio Esposito and Lucila de Almeida, A Shocking Truth for Law and Economics: Consumer Welfare Explains the Internal Market for Electricity Better than Total Welfare
  • Part II Investment in Infrastructure
  • Bruce R. Huber, Paying for Energy
  • James W. Coleman, Energy Market and Policy Revolutions: Regulatory Process and the Cost of Capital
  • Stephan Meyer, Intergenerational Choice Under Uncertainty: The Case of Future Energy Technologies
  • Part III Regulatory Innovation
  • Mariusz J. Golecki and Jaroslaw Beldowski, Creating Social Norms Through Media, Cascades and Cognitive Anchors: Judicial Activism and the Quality of Energy Law from the Perspective of Behavioural Law and Economics
  • Markus Schreiber, Capacity Mechanisms: An Intervention Needed in Failing Markets?
  • Rolf H. Weber, Energy Labels – Nudging Policy to Avoid Trade Implications?
  • Mariusz J. Golecki and Piotr Tereszkiewicz, Consumer Protection on Energy Markets – Selected Insights from Behavioural Law and Economics and Regulatory Practice
  • Part IV State Aid
  • Henok Birhanu Asmelash, The Trade and Environment Debate on the Regulation of Energy Subsidies in the WTO: What Kept Fossil Fuel Subsidies Off the Radar Screen?
  • Régis Lanneau, Promoting Renewable Energies ThroughState Aid, a Reform is Required
  • Ana Trías, State Measures in Support of Sustainable Mobility Infrastructure: The Case of Estonia, the Netherlands and Norway.