Research

The School carries out applied research with the purpose of developing economically, legally, and socially-sound regulation and policy, using a multidisciplinary approach.

Managing market tightness in the EU ETS on the path to net-zero : design options and trade-offs in price-based supply adjustments

The EU ETS is approaching a structural transition. As the linear reduction factor tightens the cap toward 2030 and beyond, the system will progressively...

Authors
Policy Brief
Financing High-Speed rail
Discover more
Article
Industrial decarbonization in a fragmented world : carbon pricing with border adjustments using standardized values
Discover more

Executive Education

We offer different types of training: Online, Residential, Blended and Tailor-made courses in all levels of knowledge.

Policy Events

A wide range of events for open discussion and knowledge exchange. In Florence, Brussels, worldwide and online.

More

Discover more initiatives, broader research, and featured reports.

Lights on Women

The Lights on Women initiative promotes, trains and advocates for women in energy, climate and sustainability, boosting their visibility, representation and careers.

Discover more
Other

The long march towards an EU power target model (1.0)… and the journey towards a 2030 target model (2.0)

The European Union took more than 20 years to define a common market design for its internal electricity market: a European Power Target Model. And, a further 10 years to fully implement it. In the meantime, the reference generation set of that model has shifted from the Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) burning gas to RES units transforming intermittent natural resources. Could the existing EU target model continue to work well for the short-term operation and long-term investment? If not, can the existing EU institutions readily produce a “RES resilient” new power target model? While the European Union has succeeded in developing a “continent scale” power target model, which neither the USA nor Canada achieved, it has been a lengthy process. It has taken decades (since the first “internal market” directive in 1996) to produce this model which largely relies on the former concept of EU-wide “cross-border CCGT competition” (Glachant & Lévêque, 2009). The corresponding market pricing is zonal and mainly Day-Ahead; the power system operation is also zonal, both intra-day or “real-time”. Will this Target Model resist the integration of massive renewables Could the EU easily develop a new Target Model to integrate massive renewables? Or, would it prefer to keep the existing one and upgrade it with a few “add-ons”? It is difficult to foresee if the EU could succeed in undertaking all of the challenging but necessary “target model” upgrades to enter a 2030 forward looking strategy.

GLACHANT, Jean-Michel, The long march towards an EU power target model (1.0)… and the journey towards a 2030 target model (2.0) - hdl.handle.net

Don’t miss any update on this topic

Sign up for free and access the latest publications and insights

Sign up

Latest publication in the same area

Ronnie  Belmans Alberto Pototschnig ECSM
Tim Schittekatte KB ZB
Nicolò Rossetto TJ ML LS AS
Back to top