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Upcoming Issue 1/13: Energy Grids and Infrastructure DevelopmentWhat might be considered the first generation of law and policy for the promotion of renewable energy took the predominant form of encouraging and enabling the installation of electricity production facilities. Over the course of the last decade, several (especially European countries) have reached levels of renewable energy installation and production that were previously thought destabilizing to the grid. In this issue of the Renewable Energy Law and Policy Review contributions will focus on energy grids and infrastructure development in the light of the changes to achieve the renewable electricity production objectives that have been set at national and EU level. SPECIAL OFFER: Order the two special issues "Reactions to the German Energiewende" and "Energy Grids" for the price of one here!
RELP - A Journal of Renewable Energy Law and Policy
Never has there been a time when so much of the world‘s attention is focused on the rapidly increasing potential and need for renewable energy. The Journal of Renewable Energy Law and Policy provides a platform for review and discussion, both in Europe and internationally, of the legal and policy issues surrounding renewable energy. The journal reports on the dynamic and quickly changing developments taking place in Europe and around the world in the renewable energy sector, from bio-energy, solar and wind power to developing technologies like fuel cells and nuclear fusion.
The journal serves a growing international community of renewable energy practitioners, lawyers and thought leaders with timely updates on legal and policy issues impacting renewable energy technologies and development. Each issue reports on trends and critical issues from the European Union and its active Member States, cutting edge experience from North America, Australia, and Japan, as well as opportunities and challenges in emerging markets and various corners of the developing world.
Leading renewable energy scholars and practitioners report on the legal and policy implications of recent technology advances, political and regulatory decisions, market trends, as well as insightful new literature and relevant events. Above all, the journal provides a discussion forum and source of ideas and opportunities about critical issues of renewable energy – issues that will likely change our world.
Editor
Dominic Marcellino (Ecologic Institute, Washington DC)
Editorial Board
Adrian Bradbrook University of Adelaide Adelaide, Australia
Kurt Deketelaere University of Leuven Leuven, Belgium
Bharat Desai Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi, India
Christian Held Becker Büttner Held Berlin, Germany
David Jacobs Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies Potsdam, Germany
Thorsten Müller Foundation for Environmental Energy Law Würzburg, Germany
Richard Ottinger Pace Law School New York, USA
James Prest The Australian National University Canberra, Australia
Michael Rodi University of Greifswald Greifswald, Germany
Martha Roggenkamp University of Groningen Groningen, The Netherlands
Anita Rønne University of Copenhagen Copenhagen, Denmark
Kai Schlegelmilch Federal Environment Ministry Berlin, Germany
Stefan Tostmann European Commission Brussels, Belgium Andrew Whitehead Martineau Birmingham, United Kingdom
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