scholarly journals ‘Harder’ soft governance in the European Energy Union

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 787-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michèle Knodt ◽  
Marc Ringel ◽  
Rainer Müller
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 370-379
Author(s):  
Jonas J. Schoenefeld

The European Green Deal (EGD) puts forward and engages with review mechanisms, such as the European Semester and policy monitoring, to ensure progress towards the long-term climate targets in a turbulent policy environment. Soft-governance mechanisms through policy monitoring have been long in the making, but their design, effects, and politics remain surprisingly under-researched. While some scholars have stressed their importance to climate governance, others have highlighted the difficulties in implementing robust policy monitoring systems, suggesting that they are neither self-implementing nor apolitical. This article advances knowledge on climate policy monitoring in the EU by proposing a new analytical framework to better understand past, present, and potential future policy monitoring efforts, especially in the context of the EGD. Drawing on Lasswell (1965), it unpacks the politics of policy monitoring by analysing <em>who </em>monitors,<em> what</em>,<em> why</em>,<em> when</em>,<em> and with what effect(s)</em>. The article discusses each element of the framework with a view to three key climate policy monitoring efforts in the EU which are particularly relevant for the EGD, namely those emerging from the Energy Efficiency Directive, the Renewable Energy Directive, and the Monitoring Mechanism Regulation (now included in the Energy Union Governance Regulation), as well as related processes for illustration. Doing so reveals that the policy monitoring regimes were set up differently in each case, that definitions of the subject of monitoring (i.e., public policies) either differ or remain elusive, and that the corresponding political and policy impact of monitoring varies. The article concludes by reflecting on the implications of the findings for governing climate change by means of monitoring through the emerging EGD.


Author(s):  
Ana-Maria Iulia Şanta

Abstract The European Commission has the initiative to foster the sector of renewable energy and to build an Energy Union, with a common energy market at the level of the European Union, but is this only an utopic vision or is this possible to achieve? The topic of clean energy is very new and of great interest for the European Union, which is shown by the fact that the European Commission recently adopted on the 30th November 2016 the package “Clean Energy for All Europeans”, which contains proposals for the modernization of the energy market at the level of the European Union. But which are the challenges such a project is confronted with? According to the literature, such challenges are related to the process of liberalization of electricity markets. Conflicts between national interest and international actors of the energy market might occur. Due to the oligopolistic structure of the energy market, there are several barriers to the market entry. In order to answer to the research questions, case studies regarding the liberalization of the energy market will be analyzed in a comparative manner, offering an international overview. Furthermore, the legal provisions on which the common energy policy of the European Union relies, will be analyzed, as well as their economic and social impact. The package “Clean Energy for All Europeans” comprises a proposal of the revised Renewable energy Directive, energy efficiency measures and issues related to the Energy Union Governance. It contains as well proposals for the electricity market design, which will be analyzed and the present paper outlines the contribution of this proposal in building a common energy market of the European Union. What role does competition play in implementing the common energy market of the European Union? Which role do competition authorities have in this context? These are interesting aspects to be analyzed in the present paper.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 158-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katja Brøgger

Through an ethnographic exploration of policy documents, this paper aims to expose how outcome-oriented education standards gained international hegemonic status in the Bologna Process. Taking inspiration in the concept of hegemony and by connecting the invisible power of hegemony to soft governance, the paper shows how the outcome-based modular curriculum gained hegemonic power by means of the infrastructure of the reform. Centring on the movement from political agendas within the Bologna Process to the implementation in a national context using Denmark as a case, the paper tracks the transformation from an input- and content-driven curriculum to an outcome- and objectives-driven curriculum and the transition from a semestrial timeframe structure to a modular block structure. The paper shows how consent and legitimisation is manufactured through the infrastructure of the Bologna Process consisting of communication paths, standardisation and follow-up mechanisms such as benchmarking through graphs and frameworks for reporting.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar W Fitch-Roy ◽  
David Benson ◽  
Bridget Woodman

The selection and design of renewable electricity support instruments is an important part of European Union (EU) energy policy and central to the governance of the Energy Union. In 2014, the European Commission published updated guidelines for state aid that effectively mandate the EU-wide implementation of auctions for allocating revenue support to commercial scale renewable electricity generation. This article argues that the RES auction’s rapid ascent towards dominance is explained by a coincidence of an activist interpretation of EU state aid law creating demand for knowledge about the instrument and the emergence of a ready source of supply from a burgeoning community of a RES auction specialists and experts. Knowledge gained through EU-wide implementation of auctions further adds to supply of auctions expertise among the community. The implications of positive feedback between instrument demand and the growing supply of knowledge about an instrument reinforces the importance of critical engagement between policymakers and policy experts.


Author(s):  
Andreas Hildenbrand
Keyword(s):  

El presente trabajo tiene el objetivo de ofrecer un análisis de la gobernanza y planificación territorial en las áreas metropolitanas en Alemania, para contribuir a la difusión del conocimiento sobre las experiencias obtenidas en este país, que por varias razones se consideran de especial interés. En primer lugar, se explica por qué las fórmulas adecuadas en el aspecto institucional (la gobernanza metropolitana) y el rendimiento en el ámbito de la planificación territorial constituyen factores imprescindibles para lograr un desarrollo urbano-territorial sostenible de las áreas metropolitanas. En segundo lugar, se aporta una visión general sobre las áreas metropolitanas alemanas y los diferentes modelos de instituciones de gobernanza metropolitana (hard governance) que están al uso en Alemania, considerando también las fórmulas empleadas en el ámbito del soft governance. En tercer lugar, se analiza la aplicación de estos modelos para seis casos de áreas metropolitanas (Stuttgart, Hannover, Frankfurt, München, Berlin-Brandenburg y Hamburg). El foco de atención se centra en los rasgos básicos de las instituciones metropolitanas, así como en las actuaciones realizadas en materias centrales para el desarrollo metropolitano (planificación territorial, transporte público y promoción económica). Igualmente se comentan prácticas concretas de instrumentos del soft governance. Con especial profundidad se analiza la planificación territorial metropolitana. Este análisis, que comenta y compara las prácticas planificadoras correspondientes, se estructura por las cuatro estrategias centrales que esta planificación aplica tradicionalmente en Alemania para la consecución de un desarrollo urbano-territorial sostenible, entre ellas el modelo de la ciudad razonablemente compacta y policéntrica y la planificación integrada del uso del suelo y el transporte. Finalmente, en cuarto lugar, el trabajo culmina en un conjunto de conclusiones extraíbles de las experiencias de la gobernanza y planificación territorial en las áreas metropolitanas alemanas.


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