Energy Communities in the Changing Energy Landscape
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Energy Sustainability".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2021) | Viewed by 34592
Special Issue Editors
Interests: community energy; integrated energy system; renewable energy; institutional design; responsible innovation; energy transition; energy citizenship
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: community energy storage; renewable energy; power-to-gas; smart grids; peer-to-peer trading; energy efficiency; district heating and cooling
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Energy communities are facing changing regulatory and technological landscapes, which represent both opportunities for and barriers to their development. On the one hand, the new European clean energy regulation envisages important roles for energy communities in energy systems and provides enabling conditions for their deployment (EU, 2019). Furthermore, new types of interactions among active consumers, prosumers and prosumagers are emerging, often facilitated by decentralized storage, smart grid technologies, distributed energy resources, and other small-scale technologies, as well as local exchanges enabled by innovative blockchain-based peer-to-peer trading platforms and local energy markets (Giotitsas et al., 2015; Hahnel et al., 2019; Koirala et al., 2019, 2018b; Parra et al., 2017, 2016). All these evolutions create new opportunities for energy communities to play an active role in transitioning towards more sustainable energy systems (Devine-Wright, 2019; van der Schoor and Scholtens, 2019; Rommel et al., 2018; Karunathilake et al., 2018; Koirala et al., 2016; Bauwens, 2016; Schoor et al., 2016; Dóci et al., 2015). In turn, the integration of electricity, heating, and transport sectors together with community engagement is expected to contribute to more flexible, cost-effective and efficient local energy systems (Koirala et al., 2016; Thellufsen and Lund, 2016). In this regard, energy communities are a modern development to re-organize the energy system to simultaneously integrate distributed energy resources and engage local communities (Bauwens and Devine-Wright, 2018).
On the other hand, policies that have boosted the development of local renewable projects are being withdrawn across several European countries, including pioneers like Denmark and Germany, where shifts from feed-in tariffs to more market-based instruments have progressively taken place (Bauwens et al., 2016; Leiren and Reimer, 2018; Lundberg, 2019). This has led energy communities to become increasingly professional and commercial and to search for new business models, notably through a diversification of their revenue streams, by proposing other offerings in addition to renewable energy generation, such as electric mobility services, energy efficiency models, and demand-side management (Funkhouser et al., 2015; Gui and MacGill, 2018; Herbes et al., 2017; Mirzania et al., 2019). Another notable evolution is the emergence of networks, intermediaries, coalitions, and collaborative dynamics among initiatives, which help existing and aspiring communities with various aspects of project development and advocacy work (Bauwens et al., 2019; Hargreaves et al., 2013; Huybrechts and Haugh, 2018).
These changes in policies and business models will likely have consequences ion the forms of and motivations behind participation in energy communities. Until recently, energy communities were driven by environmentally or socially motivated collectives of citizens willing to collaborate, share benefits, and challenge incumbent energy systems (Bauwens, 2016; Koirala et al., 2018a; Rogers et al., 2008; Wirth, 2014). It remains to be seen how these policy changes and evolutions in business models will affect the dynamics of community engagement. Similarly whether these new networks and intermediary organizations will be able to ensure the inclusion of a broader diversity of communities is an open question.
This Special Issue will focus on the process aspects of the ongoing energy transition by contributing to knowledge acquisition on how these changing policy and technological landscapes affect energy communities in terms of conditions for emergence and development, motivations and social dynamics of collective action and participation, business models, energy system integration options, local energy market design, policy and regulatory issues, socio-technical configurations, and community engagement. In this context, this Special Issue invites interdisciplinary contributions on technological, socio-economic, and institutional aspects of energy communities as well as their roles in the ongoing energy transition.
We invite manuscripts on topics including but not limited to the following:
- Local, virtual, and hybrid energy communities;
- Positive energy districts and neighborhoods;
- Energy communities as commons;
- Opportunities and challenges for energy communities;
- Enabling technologies and digitalization;
- Techno-economic and socio-institutional assessments of energy communities;
- (Self-)Governance, ownership, business models, cost–benefit allocations;
- Polycentricity, meta-governance, and policy-mix approach for energy communities;
- Design of local energy markets;
- Demand response and flexibility in energy communities;
- Intrinsic motivations and drivers for energy communities;
- Energy system integration and the role of multi-energy carriers (electricity, hydrogen, heat);
- Socio-technical innovations and alignments;
- Citizens and community engagement;
- Regulation and legal frameworks for energy communities;
- Changing roles and responsibilities;
- Multi-actor perspectives on energy communities;
- Energy communities and local/regional energy transition;
- Energy Citizenship;
- Digital twins of energy communities.
References:
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- Bauwens, T.; Devine-Wright, P. Positive energies? An empirical study of community energy participation and attitudes to renewable energy. Energy Policy 2018, 118, 612–625.
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- Devine-Wright, P. Community versus local energy in a context of climate emergency. Nat. Energy 2019, 4, 894–896.
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- Leiren, M.D.; Reimer, I. Historical institutionalist perspective on the shift from feed-in tariffs towards auctioning in German renewable energy policy. Energy Res. Soc. Sci. 2018, 43, 33–40.
- Lundberg, L. Auctions for all? Reviewing the German wind power auctions in 2017. Energy Policy 2019, 128, 449–458.
- Mirzania, P.; Ford, A.; Andrews, D.; Ofori, G.; Maidment, G. The impact of policy changes: The opportunities of Community Renewable Energy projects in the UK and the barriers they face. Energy Policy 2019, 129, 1282–1296.
- Parra, D.; Norman, S.A.; Walker, G.S.; Gillott, M. Optimum community energy storage system for demand load shifting. Appl. Energy 2016, 174, 130–143.
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- Van Der Schoor, T.; Van Lente, H.; Scholtens, B.; Peine, A. Challenging obduracy: How local communities transform the energy system. Energy Res. Soc. Sci. 2016, 13, 94–105.
- Thellufsen, J.Z.; Lund, H. Roles of local and national energy systems in the integration of renewable energy. Appl. Energy 2016, 183, 419–429.
- van der Schoor, T., Scholtens, B. Scientific approaches of community energy: a literature review. Centre for Energy Economics Research (CEER). University of St Andrews Research: St Andrews, UK, 2019
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Dr. Binod Koirala
Dr. David Parra
Dr. Thomas Bauwens
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- community energy
- community engagement
- renewable energy
- energy transition
- peer–peer energy exchange
- business models
- institutional design
- energy citizenship
- (self-)governance
- socio-technical innovation
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