Defusing contested authority: EU energy efficiency policymaking

 

Article published in: Journal of European Integration, 2020, Volume 42, Issue 1, pages 95-110 DOI: 10.1080/07036337.2019.1708346

Author: Claire Dupont

 

Abstract

EU energy efficiency policymaking has faced repeated contestation. Such contestation has been both sovereignty-based, when member states contest the EU’s authority to make policy on energy efficiency (subsidiarity claims), and substance-based, when concerns are raised about the choice or ambition of a policy measure. Yet, energy efficiency has become one of the five dimensions of the Energy Union. It is thus an example of EU policymaking advancing even under contestation. I investigate three main strategies to manage these contestations: (1) framing and reframing energy efficiency to enhance and consolidate authority at EU-level and to mitigate contestations over this authority; (2) developing the legal framework; and (3) applying flexibility in policy measures and employing mixed soft and hard governance tools. These strategies are employed, and interact, over both a ‘long game’ and a ‘short game’.

 

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