Legal Issues of Renewable
Energy in the Asia Region: Recent Developments in a Post-Fukushima and
Post-Kyoto Protocol Era (Energy and Environmental Law ... Series Supranational
and Comparative Aspects)
by Chien Te Fan Anton
Ming-Zhi Gao (Author)
This important volume
gathers contributions from sixteen legal academics, practitioners, and business
persons to clearly lay out, in great detail, both what is being done and what
can be done in seven East Asian countries (plus a cluster of Eurasian countries
including Turkey and ten former Soviet republics or Soviet bloc countries) to
facilitate the deployment of renewable electricity technology. The original
drafts of the articles were presented and discussed at the first International
Joint Conference on Changing Energy Law and Policy in the Asia Region in
October 2013 at the National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan.
Among the topics and
issues raised for each country (as applicable) are the following:
renewable
electricity-related policies and legal measures;
implementation and effects
of existing renewable electricity-related schemes;
current situation of
renewable electricity facilities;
legal and other barriers
to renewable electricity development;
purchase prices, periods,
surcharge adjustments, and other cost and pricing issues;
grid connection;
grid usage and expansion
rules; and
relevant institutions and
ministries.
An especially useful
feature of the book is its evaluation of how each regime transforms one or more
of the three key globally widely used market deployment schemes--feed-in tariff
(FIT), tendering, and renewable portfolio standard (RPS)--to fit its particular
situation. A wealth of highly informative graphs, charts, and tables greatly
enhance the presentation.