Nettsider med emneord «Energy law»
In this article, the author Doctoral Research Fellow Julius Rumpf explores the needs for and legal boundaries to the delegation of rule-making, particularly in light of the European Court of Justice's (ECJ's) non-delegation doctrine, or Meroni doctrine.
Webinar held by Marco Pavesi.
Policy Officer - Market Monitoring, ACER, Electricity Department.
The University of Oslo, Department of Energy and Resources Law, and the Catholic University of Portugal, in collaboration with the NorthWind Research Centre, have the pleasure of inviting you to attend a webinar on floating offshore wind permitting: comparative approach between Norway and Portugal.
Webinar held by Assistant Professor Ceciel Nieuwenhout, University of Groningen
Webinar held by Munir Hassan, Partner, Head of Energy & Climate Change Group, CMS, London, UK.
Webinar held by Alec Van Vaerenbergh, Partner, DLA Piper, Brussels office, Belgium.
Webinar held by Kia Marie Jerichau, Director of Flexibility and Balancing, Energinet, Denmark.
Webinar held by Antoine Lochet and Anna Björg Guðjónsdóttir, both from BBA//Fjeldco.
Webinar held by Dr. Romain Mauger, Head of the Legal Research Unit at the Iberian Centre for Research in Energy Storage (CIIAE), located in Cáceres, Spain.
Webinar held by Carmen Gimeno, Partner at Verdia Legal, and Secretary General of GEODE
Webinar held by Sille Grjotheim, Director and Country Manager for Renewables Certification in Norway, Energy Systems in DNV and Assistant Professor Ceciel Nieuwenhout, University of Groningen.
In pursuit of more efficient energy prices, increased security of supply and more sustainable power production, the EU has endeavoured for decades to create a pan-European market for the free trade of electricity across borders. However, connections between the national energy markets are still insufficient to make this vision of an ‘Energy Union’ a reality.
In his Ph.D. thesis, Julius Rumpf examines how EU law regulates high-voltage electricity infrastructure, particularly cross-border transmission lines (so-called interconnectors), to create a single market for electricity that spans the entire continent and helps achieve the aims of EU energy policy.
This page is only available in Norwegian .
Daniel Arnesson examines in his PhD project the development of renewable energy certificate (REC) markets in South Africa, India and Europe, with a focus on the implementation of these markets in Sweden and Norway (known as Guarantees of Origin and electricity Certificate markets in the two Nordic countries).
Research network for Energy Law in the light of the green transition towards net zero emissions
This volume includes chapters on "Developments in the EU and EU Energy Law", "EU Case Law", "New Developments in Cross-border Energy Governance", "Energy Communities" and "Clean Hydrogen: Regulatory Frameworks".
This book focuses on how law and regulation in different legal orders have responded to recent threats and can be reformed to make energy and natural resources systems more resilient in the face of disruptive natural crises and disasters. Edited by C. Banet, H. Mostert, L. Paddock, M. Montoya and I. del Guayo.
The periodical MarIus also includes SIMPLY, the Scandinavian Institute’s Maritime and Petroleum Law Yearbook.
In SIMPLY the Scandinavian Institute of Maritime Law presents research of its members and friends.
For issues from 2010, see MarIus - the periodical.
In this this article, Associate Professor Katrine Broch Hauge explains the content of the Fosen-judgment and the convention on biological diversity, and other key characteristics of the development of the management of the Norwegian outfields.
On 14 and 15 May 2024, the Department of Energy and Resources Law organized, in cooperation with the Research Group in Natural Resources Law of the University of Oslo, the 1st edition of the annual ELAWNET conference dedicated to Energy Law in the light of the green transition towards net zero emissions.
The programme includes 4 presentations covering specific legal consequences of the war in Ukraine at different levels of the legal systems: international, EU and national.
The meeting is open, but we would appreciate if you would register your attendance. Please note: This will be a physical meeting only.
By Lee Paddock, Associate Dean for Environmental Studies, Professorial Lecturer in Law, the George Washington University.
Catherine Banet's PhD-project: ”Tradable Green Certificates Schemes under EU Law. The influence of EU law on national support schemes for renewable electricity generation”.