This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. <WRAP catbadge blue>Institutions & Markets </WRAP> ====== Tariffs ====== <WRAP meta> lead-authors: [Name] contributors: [Names] reviewers: [Names] version: 0.2 updated: 25 March 2026 sensitivity: low status: backlog ai-use: </WRAP> <WRAP intro> This topic is part of the ISGAN Wiki and is currently being developed. You can contribute directly by clicking the edit button, or use the [[about:newtopic|Topic Builder]] for guided input. A confirmed wiki account is required. Register and allow up to three days for admin confirmation. Before contributing, read the [[about:guidelines|ISGAN Wiki Editorial Guidelines]]. </WRAP> <WRAP insight> This topic has not been drafted yet and could benefit from your expertise. </WRAP> ===== Why this matters ===== <WRAP callout> [To be drafted] </WRAP> ===== Shared definitions ===== ===== Perspectives ===== <WRAP perspectives> ==== Actors and stakeholders ==== ==== Technologies and infrastructure ==== ==== Institutional structures ==== </WRAP> ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== ===== Related topics ===== [[topics:regulation|Regulation]] · [[topics:markets|Markets]] · [[topics:flexibility_markets|Flexibility markets]] · [[topics:grid_edge|Grid edge]] · [[topics:users_citizens_consumers|Users, citizens, consumers]] ===== Topic notes ===== **Content notes from source material:** * Source material contains two incomplete draft sentences: (1) tariffs are regulated components of service fees to grid users; (2) WG7 focuses on tariffs charged to users at the grid edge, including all forms of energy generation. Both are starting points for the shared definition and the WG7 scope statement. * The grid-edge tariff focus from WG7 is the distinguishing angle for this page relative to general regulation — develop this in the institutional structures perspective.