Fsr Energy & Climate

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Synopsis

Podcast by Florence School of Regulation

Episodes

  • FSR at the Florence Forum 2017 | Jean-Michel Glachant (FSR)

    30/05/2017 Duration: 10min

    Description: Nicolò Rossetto (FSR) and Jean-Michel Glachant (FSR) discuss the role of the Florence Forum in the development of an internal market for electricity. Following an intense exchange of views on the European Commission’s proposal on regional cooperation and ROCs, Glachant highlights the need for coordination tools, cost and benefit sharing principles and solidarity at the European level. These three elements are necessary if Europe wants to create a seamless electricity system from Lisbon to Helsinki. Cross-border remedial actions for congestion management and crisis management are two concrete and relevant examples, where coordination, sharing and solidarity are particularly needed.

  • Room for capacity mechanisms in the electricity market design of the future? | Juan Alba Rios

    24/05/2017 Duration: 05min

    Recorded 18 May 2017, Brussels Description: Nicolò Rossetto (FSR) and Juan Alba Rios (chairman of the EURELECTRIC Markets Committee) discuss the 2016 legislative proposals of the European Commission on a new market design for the electricity sector. Alba Rios expresses a positive view on the proposal, which strengthens the role of markets in providing signals to economic actors and acknowledges the possibility of establishing capacity remuneration mechanisms to complement the existing energy-only markets. Indeed, short-term scarcity prices are not enough to foster adequate investment decisions in generation capacity and must be supported by additional, market-based, incentives. According to EURELECTRIC, although the Commission's proposal is not perfect, it goes in the right direction and provides a good starting point for building the market design of the future.

  • Missing pillars and roadblocks to the integration of the EU electricity system | Ben Voorhorst

    15/05/2017 Duration: 07min

    Recorded 11 May 2017 at CEER, Brussels Description: Nicolò Rossetto (FSR)and Ben Voorhorst (COO at TenneT, ENTSO-E)discuss the report prepared by the Florence School of Regulation on the integration and the decarbonisation of the European electricity sector. Mr Voorhorst acknowledges the relevance of the missing pillars and the roadblocks identified in the report and underlines the necessity for European policy-makers to take clear decisions regarding coordination of actions and decisions, sharing of costs and benefits, and of solidarity beyond costs and benefits. Without such basic and intrinsically political choices, technical entities like TSOs cannot provide, by their own, efficient and effective solutions enabling the full integration of the European electricity system and a smooth and speedy transition to a low-carbon economy.

  • Revised Renewable Energy Directive │ Christopher Bremme & Thomas Schulz

    26/04/2017 Duration: 21min

    In this podcast, Christopher Bremme and Thomas Schulz of Linklaters Berlin discuss the Commission’s proposed revision of the Renewable Energy Directive of 30 November 2016.

  • REMIT in Italy | Rosaria Arancio

    05/04/2017 Duration: 12min

    In this podcast, Rosaria Arancio of Macchi di Cellere Gangemi discusses the implementation of REMIT in Italy. REMIT is the EU Regulation on Wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency (REMIT) (Regulation No. 1227/2011), overseen by ACER and National Regulatory Authorities, which aims to establish common rules, at European level, to prevent abusive practices in wholesale energy markets. It defines abusive practices in terms of market manipulation and insider trading, prohibits abusive practices in the wholesale electricity and gas markets, applies a monitoring system of the European energy markets, and gives National Regulatory Authorities powers to enforce rules, investigate and sanction misconducts. This podcast considers how the Italian regulatory authority AEEGSI has applied REMIT to Italy, including looking at recent cases where the criteria of REMIT was put into effect.

  • Cybersecurity in the Energy Sector | Annabelle Lee (EPRI)

    28/03/2017 Duration: 03min

    Nicolò Rossetto from the Florence School of Regulation asks Annabelle Lee from the Electric Power Research Institute a couple key questions regarding cybersecurity in the Energy Sector from a U.S. perspective. "The issue of cybersecurity in the electric sector and gas both is of high importance and high visibility in the United States." "Dealing with cybersecurity in the electric sector the primary importance is the reliability of the grid." "How do you implement cybersecurity where you have a lot of very old equipment that you cannot put cyber security in? "

  • Energy Union Governance | Jean Arnold Vinois

    13/03/2017 Duration: 06min

    Ilaria Conti, Head of the Gas Area at the Florence School of Regulation talks to Jean Arnold Vinois, former director of DG Energy at the European Commission. She asks, "what is energy governance"? Recorded in Bruges, Belgium, April 2017 "The concept of an Energy Union is already a kind of revolution where the idea is to approach energy in a holistic way" "the first change which the Commission has brought into the Energy Union is to put the consumer first" "the member states are going backwards because they don't want binding targets on renewals"

  • The Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) │ Yasmine Li & Shane Henley

    22/02/2017 Duration: 11min

    The Market Abuse Regulation (MAR): Technology for Meeting Market Abuse Regulation Challenges In this podcast Yasmine Li and Shane Henley, from Baringa Partners, discuss the EU Market Abuse Regulation (MAR), which came into force in July 2016. The new EU-wide regime, replacing the previous Market Abuse Directive (MAD), is intended to harmonise measures addressing market distortion arising from regulatory arbitrage. The regulation extends its scope to new markets and redefines the terms of market abuse, introducing some significant changes including a transaction surveillance capability. This podcast outlines the key aspects of the regulation and its compliance obligations for energy players in the wholesale markets. Link: Accompanying slides are available here https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B0TGd4_CLZXNNGdiZkhGVVpYUWc

  • Brexit: The Implications for the Internal Energy Market | Deni Mantzari

    30/01/2017 Duration: 07min

    Description: In this podcast, Deni Mantzari from the University of Reading addresses the looming effects of Brexit on the EU's internal energy market. While the terms of the UK's planned exit remain to be seen, unravelling their ties with the EU undoubtedly poses considerable challenges to an EU which is pushing toward an increasingly harmonised Energy Union. Up to this point, the UK has played a pivotal role in shaping the energy policies and regulations of the EU, particularly with respect to the liberalisation of the market. How will the UK's departure impact upon market integration initiatives, such as market coupling, cross-border balancing and cross-border capacity remuneration mechanisms, and the development of network codes? In addition, at the level of governance, while the UK will have to interact with the EU's energy networks, they will not be allowed to have representation in certain governing bodies such as ACER. In turn, without the UK's influence, how might the EU's energy priorities change? A

  • Cross-border participation in Capacity Remuneration Mechanisms ǀ Dan Roberts

    06/12/2016 Duration: 16min

    Video version here: https://youtu.be/eI3DSKYb-I4 Capacity remuneration mechanisms are currently at the forefront of the EU energy debate with the electricity sector, in particular, undergoing a considerable shake-up. One element of this discussion, is cross-border participation in capacity remuneration mechanisms, which is becoming increasingly important to a Europe-wide approach of ensuring a sustainable security of supply and the efficiency of the internal energy market. In this podcast, Dan Roberts from Frontier Economics outlines the key issues surrounding cross-border participation. He considers it from several aspects: how much capacity should be allowed to cross over; if participation is permitted in more than one national scheme; who should participate - generators or interconnectors; what consumers are paying for; and lastly, the challenge of cross-border co-operation across Europe. To view accompanying slides for the podcast, please see http://www.slideshare.net/secret/E4pabGafFQGdXT

  • Regulation and Integration of Renewable Energy | Residential + Online Training

    14/11/2016 Duration: 02min

    http://fsr.eui.eu/training/energy/regulation-integration-renewable-energy/ FSR’s new training on the Regulation and Integration of Renewable Energy will provide a comprehensive and detailed view of the European regulatory framework for the integration and development of renewable energy from top European experts.

  • Congestion Management in the Internal Energy Market Workshop | Alberto Pototschnig

    14/11/2016 Duration: 04min

    Scientific Organisers: Jean-Michel Glachant | Florence School of Regulation/RSCAS/EUI Alberto Pototschnig | Florence School of Regulation/RSCAS/EUI and ACER Interview by Pradyumna Bhagwat | Research Associate at Florence School of Regulation Florence, 28 October 2016 FSR REGULATORY POLICY WORKSHOP SERIES 2016-2017 http://fsr.eui.eu/event/congestion-management-in-the-internal-energy-market/ The establishment of a fully integrated European energy market is one of the five mutually-reinforcing and closely interrelated dimensions of the EU Energy Union strategy aimed at bringing greater energy security, sustainability and competitiveness to the EU’s economy. In this regard, the integration of national markets has been one of the primary objectives of EU energy policy since the 1990s and has been pursued throughout three legislative packages and detailed provisions defined in Network Codes and Guidelines. The achievement of a fully integrated and well-functioning EU energy market requires both an optimal leve

  • 8th FSR And BNetzA Forum On The Legal Issues Of Energy Regulation | Nadia Horstmann

    03/11/2016 Duration: 01min

    Nadia Horstmann from Bundesnetzagentur outlines the FSR & BNetzA Forum on the Legal Issues of Energy Regulation and gives an insight into the important topics discussed this year. Florence, 28 October 2016 http://fsr.eui.eu/event/8th-fsr-bnetza-forum-legal-issues-energy-regulation/ Jointly organised by the FSR Energy Law and Policy Area and Bundesnetzagentur, the German regulatory office, the forum will focus on the emerging energy market design. The workshop will open with a keynote address from Professor Michael Pollitt on the future of the European single market for gas and electricity.

  • Merger Investigation: The General Electric/ Alstom Case | Gianni De Stefano and Pierre Loaec

    13/10/2016 Duration: 38min

    In this podcast, Gianni De Stefano of Hogan Lovells International LLP (Brussels) and Pierre Loaec from the European Commission discuss the Commission’s investigation into the acquisition by US-based General Electric (GE) of the energy businesses of French multinational Alstom. Valued at more than €12 billion, the deal generated considerable interest and triggered multiple merger control and foreign investment filings worldwide. In 2015, the Commission launched an in-depth investigation to assess whether the acquisition was in line with the EU Merger Regulation particularly due to concerns regarding competition in the market for heavy-duty gas turbines. Gianni de Stefano and Pierre Loaec detail the history of the case, review the conclusions of the investigation and consider the effect it had on the energy sector.

  • Annegret Groebel | Regionalisation

    28/09/2016 Duration: 05min

    Jean-Michel is joined by Annegret Groebel, vice-President CEER & Vice-chair of ACER's Board of Regulators, to discuss regional cooperation in the internal energy market and the coupling of regions. How can we converge towards a common regime? And who is in charge of the process? Recorded 23 September at the conference "Completing the European Power Market Integration" organised by ENTSO-E in Bratislava with the support of FSR. http://fsr.eui.eu/event/completing-european-power-market-integration/ “I think we should not talk of regionalisation because this indeed has the negative impact of splitting the market, and we all work towards the internal energy market.” “All stake holders must work together, and would not say it is bottom up or top down, maybe we can say it’s kind of a diagonal”

  • Brexit impact on Energy | Jean Arnold Vinois

    13/09/2016 Duration: 04min

    Jean Arnold Vinois, advisor on European Energy Policy at the Jacques Delors Institute, considers the potential impact of Brexit on the energy sector, especially given the prominent role the UK has played in shaping energy policies in several key areas. How will the new balance of power affect future policy objectives?

  • Alan Riley: Pipelines between economics, law and diplomacy

    25/07/2016 Duration: 18min

    http://energylawforum.eu/ The Vienna Forum on European Energy Law is a joint initiative between the Florence School of Regulation and the Energy Community Secretariat. It is designed to promote engagement and discussion on the most relevant issues currently facing the EU and the countries of Eastern and South Eastern Europe. In an ever-changing energy landscape, the forum considers the complex and challenging legal aspects of EU energy policy, and the opportunities of integration with the EU internal energy market.

  • Christoph Riechmann: An electricity market design at last?

    25/07/2016 Duration: 26min

    http://energylawforum.eu/ The Vienna Forum on European Energy Law is a joint initiative between the Florence School of Regulation and the Energy Community Secretariat. It is designed to promote engagement and discussion on the most relevant issues currently facing the EU and the countries of Eastern and South Eastern Europe. In an ever-changing energy landscape, the forum considers the complex and challenging legal aspects of EU energy policy, and the opportunities of integration with the EU internal energy market.

  • Dennis Hesseling: A new role for the Agency

    25/07/2016 Duration: 18min

    http://energylawforum.eu/ The Vienna Forum on European Energy Law is a joint initiative between the Florence School of Regulation and the Energy Community Secretariat. It is designed to promote engagement and discussion on the most relevant issues currently facing the EU and the countries of Eastern and South Eastern Europe. In an ever-changing energy landscape, the forum considers the complex and challenging legal aspects of EU energy policy, and the opportunities of integration with the EU internal energy market.

  • Kristof Ferenczi: Energy Efficiency: How Efficient is the Regulatory Framework?

    25/07/2016 Duration: 22min

    http://energylawforum.eu/ The Vienna Forum on European Energy Law is a joint initiative between the Florence School of Regulation and the Energy Community Secretariat. It is designed to promote engagement and discussion on the most relevant issues currently facing the EU and the countries of Eastern and South Eastern Europe. In an ever-changing energy landscape, the forum considers the complex and challenging legal aspects of EU energy policy, and the opportunities of integration with the EU internal energy market.

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