混合能源治理

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW University of Illinois Law Review Pub Date : 2013-02-13 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2147860
H. Osofsky, H. Wiseman
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引用次数: 47

摘要

本文发展了一种新的能源治理理论,并用它来评估制度创新如何有助于应对关键挑战。能源法本质上是复杂的,而且非常分散。每个能源部门——包括燃料开采和管道、发电和输电以及运输——都有自己的法律制度和联邦制方法;在危机时刻,联邦、州和地方监管机构在这些领域有多大的权力往往令人困惑。能源法的复杂性和碎片化尤其成问题,因为能源系统面临着新兴技术、更多不可预测和极端天气事件以及公众要求“更清洁”能源的压力带来的重大转变。监管机构努力管理水力压裂和深水钻井的风险,升级老化的电网,并将可再生能源整合到电网和电力市场中。基于我们之前的工作,本文提出了一种应对现代能源挑战的治理模式,主张在能源法中采用一种动态的、全面的联邦制方法。本文关注的是“混合”机构的潜力,这种机构包括来自多个治理层面的公共和私人行为体,并使它们之间能够进行重要的互动。该报告将其方法建立在跨学科治理理论的基础上,认为这些机构具有能够解决结构性障碍的特点——例如监管权力不充分、分散,以及将关键的私人行为体纳入能源决策的复杂性——从而取得实质性进展。在介绍了新的概念模型之后,本文考察了几个具有重要区域组成部分的混合机构,这些机构正在努力解决本文确定的三个核心实质性能源挑战。它分析了他们在应对这些挑战方面的进展,以及他们的混合治理方法是如何帮助他们这样做的。
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Hybrid Energy Governance
This Article develops a novel theory of energy governance and uses it to assess how institutional innovation can help meet critical challenges. Energy law is substantively complex and deeply fragmented. Each energy sector - including fuel extraction and pipelines, electricity generation and transmission, and transportation - has its own legal regime and federalism approach; confusion often exists at moments of crisis about how much authority federal, state, and local regulators have in these areas. The complexity and fragmentation of energy law are particularly problematic because the energy system faces major transitions due to emerging technology, more unpredictable and extreme weather events, and public pressure for 'cleaner' energy. Regulators struggle to: manage the risks of hydraulic fracturing and deepwater drilling, upgrade our aging electricity grid, and integrate renewable energy sources onto that grid and into electricity markets. Building from our prior work arguing for a dynamic, comprehensive approach to federalism in energy law, this Article proposes a governance model to address modern energy challenges. The Article focuses on the potential of institutions that are 'hybrid' by virtue of including public and private actors from several governance levels, and enabling important interactions among them. Grounding its approach in interdisciplinary governance theory, it argues that these institutions have characteristics that could address structural barriers - such as inadequate, divided regulatory authority, and the complexities of including key private actors in energy decision making - to substantive progress. After introducing its new conceptual model, the Article examines several hybrid institutions with substantial regional components that are working to address the three core substantive energy challenges identified here. It analyzes their progress in meeting these challenges, and how their hybrid governance approach is assisting them in doing so.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
9.10%
发文量
1
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