Document Type
Article
Publication
Ecology Law Quarterly
Year
2016
Citation Information
Sharon B. Jacobs, The Energy Prosumer, 43 Ecology L.Q. 519 (2016), available at https://scholar.law.colorado.edu/faculty-articles/709.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.15779/Z38XS02
Abstract
Decentralization is becoming a dominant trend in many industries, and the electricity industry is no exception. Increasing numbers of energy consumers generate their own electricity and/or provide essential grid services such as storage, efficiency, and demand response. This Article offers a positive account of the emergence of these new energy actors, which it calls "energy prosumers. " It then frames several doctrinal and procedural puzzles that prosumers create, including jurisdictional puzzles, distributional concerns, and democratic challenges. Ultimately, it concludes that prosumers can be a positive disruptive force in the electricity industry if courts and regulators can manage these challenges effectively. The Article suggests that increased prosumption not only helps further traditional energy law goals, but also is consistent with a modernized canon of energy law norms, including environmental protection and market competition. The Article concludes by outlining regulatory pathways to a prosumer future. It emphasizes the policy experimentation currently taking place and suggests conditions for, and core elements of a more centralized, synoptic regulatory strategy.
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Included in
Administrative Law Commons, Energy and Utilities Law Commons, Environmental Law Commons, Jurisdiction Commons, Law and Economics Commons, State and Local Government Law Commons
Comments
"Copyright © 2016 Regents of the University of California."