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On designing cost-reflective demand tariffs
Passey et al. (2017) used actual energy consumption data of Sydney households to analyse the extent to which different electricity network demand tariffs charge customers according to the cost of their consumption. Among other things, they illustrate that a demand tariff that charges households’ individual monthly peak demand is less likely to be cost-reflective than one applied during the monthly network peak period. Picture by Nastya Dulhiier, Unsplash Electricity network

Filippos Papasavvas
Dec 2


On measuring energy poverty
Bardazzi et al (2023) argue that the complex nature of energy poverty prevents it from being captured by a single variable. For this...

Filippos Papasavvas
Feb 4, 2024


On energy communities in Greece
Maniatis et al (2023) discuss the rise of energy communities in Greece since they were first introduced by legislation in 2018. The...

Filippos Papasavvas
Dec 27, 2023


Why Oil Mattered (and Still Does)
Yergin’s The Prize provides a sweeping account of the history of oil, using it as a lens to view the most impactful economic, political,...

Sean Hays
Mar 30, 2022


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