Collective Renewable Energy Prosumers and the Promises of the Energy Union: Taking Stock
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In: Energies, Vol. 13, No. 2, 421, 15.01.2020.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Collective Renewable Energy Prosumers and the Promises of the Energy Union
T2 - Taking Stock
AU - Horstink, Lanka
AU - Wittmeyer, Julia M.
AU - Ng, Kiat
AU - Pontes Luz, Guilherme
AU - Marín-González, Esther
AU - Gährs, Swantje
AU - Campos, Inês
AU - Holstenkamp, Lars
AU - Oxenaar, Sem
AU - Brown, Donal
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2020 by the authors
PY - 2020/1/15
Y1 - 2020/1/15
N2 - A key strategy in the European Union’s ambition to establish an ‘Energy Union’ that is not just clean, but also fair, consists of empowering citizens to actively interact with the energy market as self-consumers or prosumers. Although renewable energy sources (RES) prosumerism has been growing for at least a decade, two new EU directives are intended to legitimise and facilitate its expansion. However, little is known about the full range of prosumers against which to measure policy effectiveness. We carried out a documentary study and an online survey in nine EU countries to shed light on the demographics, use of technology, organisation, financing, and motivation as well as perceived hindering and facilitating factors for collective prosumers. We identified several internal and external obstacles to the successful mainstreaming of RES prosumerism, among them a mismatch of policies with the needs of different RES prosumer types, potential organisational weaknesses as well as slow progress in essential reforms such as decentralising energy infrastructures. Our baseline results offer recommendations for the transposition of EU directives into national legislations and suggest avenues for future research in the fields of social, governance, policy, technology, and business models.
AB - A key strategy in the European Union’s ambition to establish an ‘Energy Union’ that is not just clean, but also fair, consists of empowering citizens to actively interact with the energy market as self-consumers or prosumers. Although renewable energy sources (RES) prosumerism has been growing for at least a decade, two new EU directives are intended to legitimise and facilitate its expansion. However, little is known about the full range of prosumers against which to measure policy effectiveness. We carried out a documentary study and an online survey in nine EU countries to shed light on the demographics, use of technology, organisation, financing, and motivation as well as perceived hindering and facilitating factors for collective prosumers. We identified several internal and external obstacles to the successful mainstreaming of RES prosumerism, among them a mismatch of policies with the needs of different RES prosumer types, potential organisational weaknesses as well as slow progress in essential reforms such as decentralising energy infrastructures. Our baseline results offer recommendations for the transposition of EU directives into national legislations and suggest avenues for future research in the fields of social, governance, policy, technology, and business models.
KW - Management studies
KW - renewable energy prosumer
KW - energy transition
KW - collective prosumer
KW - energy union
KW - community energy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078094573&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/en13020421
DO - 10.3390/en13020421
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 13
JO - Energies
JF - Energies
SN - 1996-1073
IS - 2
M1 - 421
ER -