4.8 Article

Renewable energy communities under the 2019 European Clean Energy Package - Governance model for the energy clusters of the future?

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 122, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2019.109489

Keywords

Renewable energy policy; Prosumers; Decentralised energy; Energy communities; Energy dusters; European Union; Consumer (co-)ownership

Funding

  1. Horizon 2020 project SCORE

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The recast of the European Union Renewable Energy Directive (RED II) entered into force in December 2018, followed by the Internal Electricity Market Directive (IEMD) and Regulation (IEMR) as part of the Clean Energy for all Europeans Package. The RED II, that the 28 Member States have until June 2021 to transpose into national law, defines Renewable Energy Communities (RECs), introduces a governance model for them and the possibility of energy sharing within the REC. It also provides an enabling framework to put RECs on equal footing with other market players and to promote and facilitate their development. This article defines renewable energy clusters that are comprised of complementarity of different energy sources, flexibility, interconnectivity of different actors and bi-directionality of energy flows. We argue that RECs and RE clusters are socio-technical mirrors of the same concept, necessary in a renewable energy transition. To test how these new rules will fare in practice, drawing on a secondary dataset of 67 best-practice cases of consumer (co-)ownership from 18 countries, each project is assessed using the criteria of cluster potential, and for the extent that they meet the RED II governance requirements of heterogeneity of members and of ownership structure. Nine cases were identified as having cluster potential all of which were in rural areas. Of these, five projects were found to be both RECs and RE clusters. The absence of the governance and heterogeneity criteria is observed in projects that fall short of the cluster elements of flexibility, bi-directionality and interconnectivity, while cluster elements occur where the governance and heterogeneity criteria are met. When transposing the new rules into national law we recommend careful attention to encourage complementarity of renewables, RECs in urban contexts and regulatory sandboxes for experimentation to find the range of optimal preferential conditions of the enabling framework.

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