Multi-level lobbying in the EU: The case of the Renewables Directive and the German energy industry

This study examines the lobbying strategies employed by the interest organizations of Germany s energy industries in the process leading up to the EU s Renewable Energy Directive. How did they lobby, and what does this reveal about their perceptions of power relations in the EU? This report focuses...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ydersbond, Inga
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10852/34448
http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-33285
Description
Summary:This study examines the lobbying strategies employed by the interest organizations of Germany s energy industries in the process leading up to the EU s Renewable Energy Directive. How did they lobby, and what does this reveal about their perceptions of power relations in the EU? This report focuses on the most controversial part of the Directive: legal prescriptions for support mechanisms to increase the production of renewable energy in Europe. The utilities and the renewables industries disagreed deeply, with the utilities industry favouring an EU-wide green certificate scheme, while the renewables industry pressed for national feed-in tariffs. Nine interest organizations representing these sectors, five German and four at the EU level, serve as cases in this study. Expectations as to lobbying behaviour based on the two theories/theory perspectives of liberal intergovernmentalism (LI) and multi-level governance (MLG) are formulated and tested in a most-likely case design. Result: observations are better described by the MLG perspective than by LI. FNI-rapport 10/2012 Copyright Fridtjof Nansen Institute 2012 Tilgjengeliggjort med tillatelse fra FNI.