Closing the Coordination Gap: A Policy Architecture for the European Energy Transition
調整ギャップを埋める:欧州エネルギー転換のための政策アーキテクチャ (AI 翻訳)
John F. Ryder
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本論文は、EUのエネルギー転換において、需要の電化(3~5年サイクル)とインフラ整備(10~15年)の間に生じるタイミングの不整合(調整ギャップ)を特定し、それを埋める政策アーキテクチャを提案する。具体的には、短期・中期・長期の資産を組み合わせた「ブリッジングスタック」と、TESP、PESEC、ERCという3つの政策手段を導入し、2028~2032年の赤字ウィンドウを安定化させる。需要側の調整をインフラとして捉える点が革新的である。
English
This paper identifies and addresses the temporal coordination gap between demand electrification (3-5 year cycle) and infrastructure deployment (10-15 years) in the EU energy transition. It proposes a Bridging Stack of short-, mid-, and long-term assets, along with three policy instruments (TESP, PESEC, ERC) to stabilize the system during the 2028-2032 deficit window. The framework reframes demand-side coordination as infrastructure, offering a novel approach to transition timing mismatches.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本でも、EV・ヒートポンプの普及や再エネ拡大に伴い、需要増加と送配電網・発電所の整備期間のミスマッチが顕在化しつつある。本稿の「調整ギャップ」概念とEUの政策手段(特に許可迅速化・季節間調整・人材育成)は、日本のGX政策(GX2040ビジョンなど)の設計に示唆を与える。ただし、日本の電力市場構造や制度との整合性にはさらなる検討が必要。
In the global GX context
This paper provides a structured solution to the under-recognized temporal mismatch in energy transitions, which is increasingly relevant globally as electrification accelerates. The proposed policy architecture—bridging stack, accelerated permitting, seasonal credits, and workforce resilience—offers a replicable model for other regions facing similar coordination gaps. It aligns with global trends in demand-side flexibility and system integration, and complements frameworks like the IEA's net-zero pathways.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:This paper offers a clear analytical framework for studying timing mismatches in energy transitions and can inspire comparative research across regions.
🏢実務担当者:Corporate sustainability and energy managers can use the concept of demand-side coordination as infrastructure to inform their electrification and grid interaction strategies.
🏛政策担当者:EU policymakers can directly utilize the proposed instruments (TESP, PESEC, ERC) as actionable mechanisms; other regions can adapt the coordination gap diagnosis to their own contexts.
📄 Abstract(原文)
How to Use This Work This research is structured as a layered system for policy application: Entry Point (Immediate Policy Relevance)Closing the Coordination Gaphttps://zenodo.org/records/19984617→ Defines the timing mismatch (2028–2032 window) and provides EU-aligned implementation mechanisms (TESP, PESEC, ERC). System Foundation (Transition Dynamics)Rapid Energy Transition Framework (RETF)https://zenodo.org/records/19812288→ Models coordinated deployment, pre-transition stress, and physical stabilisation layers (including geothermal infrastructure). Economic & Social Stabilisation LayerEngagement Credit Economy (ECE)https://zenodo.org/records/19843494→ Provides a participation-based mechanism to maintain demand, coordination capacity, and social continuity during transition. Together, these layers define a unified approach linking system dynamics, infrastructure deployment, and economic participation. This record presents an EU-facing policy architecture addressing a central but under-recognised constraint in the European energy transition: the coordination gap between demand evolution and infrastructure deployment timelines. Across EU Member States, electrification of transport, heating, and industry is accelerating demand on a three-to-five-year cycle, while generation and transmission infrastructure typically require ten to fifteen years to plan, permit, and deliver. The result is a structural timing mismatch — a transition deficit window in which demand outpaces available system capacity. This gap is not primarily technological or financial; it is temporal and systemic in nature. The materials contained in this record — a policy brief, a full working paper, and a supporting system diagram — together define a coordinated response to this mismatch through a structured EU policy architecture. At the core of the framework is the Bridging Stack, a layered deployment model organised by timescale: immediate assets (0–24 months) prioritising rapid deployment, mid-term flexibility infrastructure (2–6 years), and long-lead anchor assets (6–15+ years). This structure reframes transition strategy away from pure supply expansion toward sequenced system stabilisation, ensuring that short-term deployment aligns with long-term infrastructure arrival. A second pillar of the framework is the treatment of demand-side coordination as infrastructure, rather than behavioural optimisation. In high-electrification systems, demand becomes a controllable system input. Adjustments to load timing and distribution can reduce required peak capacity by approximately 20–40%, significantly lowering capital requirements while improving system stability. The EU implementation layer is defined through three policy instruments: Temporary Energy Security Permits (TESP) — accelerated permitting for short-lifecycle stabilisation assets Pan-European Seasonal Energy Credits (PESEC) — an inter-temporal coordination mechanism addressing seasonal mismatch Energy Resilience Corps (ERC) — a structured operational workforce aligned with existing EU social and cohesion frameworks These instruments are designed to operate within existing EU legal and institutional structures, including Article 194 TFEU, the Clean Energy Package, RED III, and established financing channels such as the Recovery and Resilience Facility and the Just Transition Mechanism. The accompanying diagram formalises the system-level insight: the European energy transition is constrained not by a static supply deficit, but by a dynamic mismatch between demand growth and infrastructure arrival. It visualises the critical 2028–2032 deficit window, where uncoordinated systems face the highest instability risk, and demonstrates how coordinated deployment and demand alignment can close this gap without requiring equivalent increases in long-lead capacity. This framework does not replace existing EU energy strategy. It functions as a stabilisation layer, enabling current commitments — including renewable expansion and long-term infrastructure investment — to operate effectively within real-world deployment timelines. The broader implication is structural. As technological transitions accelerate, systems increasingly fail not due to lack of capacity, but due to misalignment across time, scale, and institutional coordination. This architecture provides a model for managing that condition — within energy systems and beyond. Related Foundational Record This policy architecture is closely linked to the RETF energy transition framework developed in:Rapid Energy Transition Framework (RETF): Coordinated Demand, Rapid Generation, and Secure Control Rapid Energy Transition Framework (RETF) — https://zenodo.org/records/19812288 That record introduces the broader transition logic connecting pre-transition stress, deployment timing, coordinated demand, rapid generation, and regional resilience. Its fifth synthesis paper extends the framework by treating geothermal infrastructure as a subsurface stabilisation layer: distributed geothermal systems, district heating loops, industrial heat supply, and thermal storage.Within the present record, the coordination gap is developed as a focused EU policy architecture. The RETF record provides the wider system foundation, while this record translates the timing-mismatch problem into an EU-facing policy interface.Diagram 1: Infrastructure–Demand Timing Gap (2024–2038)A system-level visualisation of the coordination gap, illustrating the divergence between demand growth and long-lead infrastructure deployment, the resulting 2028–2032 deficit window, and the role of coordinated bridging capacity and demand alignment in stabilising the transition. Both records also build upon and extends prior work presented in: The Engagement Credit Economy: A Policy Architecture for Post-Automation Societieshttps://zenodo.org/records/19843494 within which participation, coordination, and system stabilisation are treated as core economic and institutional functions. Diagram 1: Infrastructure–Demand Timing Gap (2024–2038)A system-level visualisation of the coordination gap, illustrating the divergence between demand growth and long-lead infrastructure deployment, the resulting 2028–2032 deficit window, and the role of coordinated bridging capacity and demand alignment in stabilising the transition.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19984616first seen 2026-05-18 04:43:55 · last seen 2026-05-20 04:52:07
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