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Intro; Foreword; Preface; Introduction; Contents; Contributors; Part I: Energy Transition; Sustainability Strategies and the Problem of the Rebound Effect; 1 Introduction; 2 Efficiency Strategy; 3 Consistency Strategy; 4 Sufficiency Strategy; 5 Conclusion; References; Energy Transition Law and Economics; 1 Costs of the Energy Transition; 2 A Short History of Energy Transitions; 3 Policy Choices: The Legal/Constitutional Framework; 3.1 Energy Supply and Sovereignty; 3.2 Policy Choices in Europe; 3.2.1 Market Liberalisation; 3.2.2 Climate Change and Carbon Free Energy.

3.2.3 Phasing Out Nuclear Energy4 Examples of Limiting Individual Choices in the Energy Market; 4.1 The Emissions Trading Scheme; 4.2 Contributing to the Costs of the Supply Net; 4.3 Mechanism for Cost Allocation of Renewable Energies; 4.4 Exclusion of Foreign Electricity Producers from the Cost Covering Feed-in Tariff; 4.5 Allocating the Exit from Nuclear Energy Costs; 5 Prospects for a Law and Economics Approach?; 6 The Legal Duty for an Economic Analysis; References; Energy Transition in Switzerland; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Most Utilized Energy Forms.

1.2 Decarbonization and Withdrawal from Nuclear Energy1.3 Market Challenges; 2 Governmental Incentives; 2.1 Overview; 2.2 Current Feed-in Tariff System (``KEV System)́́; 2.3 New Market Incentives According to the Energy Strategy 2050; 2.3.1 Main Goals of the Energy Strategy 2050; 2.3.2 First Measure Package; 2.3.3 Second Measure Package (2021-2050); 3 Appraisal; References; The Interplay Between Liberalization and Decarbonization in the European Internal Energy Market for Electricity; 1 Introduction; 2 The Materialization of the EU Internal Energy Market.

3 Liberalizing the EU Electricity Sector: Decarbonization as a Positive Externality?4 EU Renewable Energy Policy: Legal Instruments Correcting for Market Failures; 5 Conclusion; References; The Temperature Target of the Paris Agreement and the Forgotten Aspects of a Meaningful Energy Transition; 1 Problem; 2 The Paris Temperature Limit and the Structure of the Paris Agreement; 3 Frictions with the Current Energy Transition; 4 Purely Technical Approaches Versus Sufficiency; 5 Motivations for Energy Transition; 6 Governance Problems; 7 Economic Governance Approaches; References.

A Shocking Truth for Law and Economics: Consumer Welfare Explains the Internal Market for Electricity Better Than Total Welfare1 Introduction; 2 Efficiency Hypothesis as Internal Explanation of the Law; 3 Parallel Circuits: Building Blocks for Total and Consumer Welfare; 3.1 Preliminary Remarks; 3.2 Distribution, Deadweight Loss, and Productive Efficiency; 3.3 The Focus on Energy-Only Pricing Methods; 4 Alternating Currents in Economically-Informed Research; 4.1 Axiological Commitments in Legal Economically-Informed Research in Electricity Market(s).

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