CODE 118544 ACADEMIC YEAR 2025/2026 CREDITS 3 cfu anno 1 MANAGEMENT FOR ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSITION (MEET) 11939 (LM-77 R) - GENOVA SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINARY SECTOR SECS-P/02 LANGUAGE English TEACHING LOCATION GENOVA SEMESTER 2° Semester MODULES Questo insegnamento è un modulo di: ECONOMIC, LAW AND HISTORY OF MEET AIMS AND CONTENT LEARNING OUTCOMES The course covers the basic principles of market regulation, from market failures to the main approaches for regulating different type of prices, with a particular focus on energy markets and their special needs in term of regulation. In the first part of the course the issue of the different rationales for regulation are discussed, including the conventional rationale based on the definition of natural monopoly and the need for addressing allocative and productive efficiency; moreover, alternative ways to control or influence firms’ behavior are analyzed, like competition for the market, contestability, state ownership, reliance on competition law and negotiated agreements. In the second part of the course, after discussing the main type of industries structures typically observed in industries subject to regulation, the principles of regulation of the core network activities are analyzed, distinguishing among the principles that might inform the regulation of the activities that more closely resemble natural monopoly and those that might inform the competitive activities in the production chain. The analysis of the key pricing principles in different regulatory settings (full information, multi-product firms, imperfect information, multi-period context) is followed by the discussion of the methods by which price regulation is applied in practice to those activities where competition is limited or non-existent, like core network activities (pipes, cables, wires, rails). Such part of the course focuses on the general properties of each type of price regulation and provides a framework for the analysis of the more specific regulatory approaches applied in specific markets, with particular reference to energy markets (gas and electricity). Moreover, the course sets out the economic principles that might inform regulation in the presence of competition in some segments of the supply chain (eg. retailing or generation in energy sectors) and where the issue of the access to the network becomes relevant. The last part of the course discusses the main insights from behavioral industrial organization that has affected the regulatory principles and how such insights have been applied by regulators. Finally, after discussing the characteristics of the different institutions that influence and apply economic regulation in practice, the course analyzes the specific regulatory issues associated to energy markets. In particular the analysis includes the physical and economic characteristics of the gas and electricity sectors, the regulatory approach, the scope and effects of restructuring policies adopted in different countries and the regulatory policy issues. Within this framework, solid evidence and multiple anecdotes are delivered in order show the concrete relevance of theoretical developments and to facilitate the understanding of reality. TEACHERS AND EXAM BOARD ANNA BOTTASSO Ricevimento: Wednesday 10.30 LESSONS LESSONS START second semester 25-26 Class schedule The timetable for this course is available here: Portale EasyAcademy