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| topics:institutions [2026/03/30 17:16] – admin | topics:institutions [2026/04/07 22:34] (current) – vso_vso | ||
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| <WRAP intro> | <WRAP intro> | ||
| - | Institutions define the rules of the game for energy systems.((North, D. C. (1990). // | + | Institutions define the rules of the game for energy systems, |
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| - | <WRAP insight> | + | |
| - | Institutions define the rules of the game for energy systems. They range from formal grid codes, market regulations, | + | |
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| ===== Why this matters ===== | ===== Why this matters ===== | ||
| - | Smart grid transitions require updates to grid connection rules, market access provisions, tariff design, and data governance. Distributed generation, demand response, storage, and digital coordination each introduce services and actor roles that existing rules were not built for. New technologies can be commercially available well before the rules governing their grid connection catch up, and informal professional norms may adapt at a different pace than formal regulation. How these rules evolve, and how fast, shapes what becomes possible in any given country.((Lockwood, | + | Smart grid transitions require updates to grid connection rules, market access provisions, tariff design, and data governance. Distributed generation, demand response, storage, and digital coordination each introduce services and actor roles that existing rules were not built for. New technologies can be commercially available well before the rules governing their grid connection catch up, and informal professional norms may adapt at a different pace than formal regulation. ((Lockwood, M., Kuzemko, C., Mitchell, C., & Hoggett, R. (2016). Historical institutionalism and the politics of sustainable energy transitions: |
| <WRAP callout> | <WRAP callout> | ||
| - | New grid rules are rarely written from scratch. More often, rules for distributed resources, flexibility markets, or storage are layered onto frameworks designed for centralised generation. The pace of adaptation matters | + | New grid rules are rarely written from scratch. More often, rules for distributed resources, flexibility markets, or storage are layered onto frameworks designed for centralised generation. The pace of adaptation matters, because formal revision and actual behavioural change can diverge for years. |
| </ | </ | ||