“…New important techno‐economic challenges that are emerging are associated with inherent difficulties in dealing with complex physical system requirements—and then market products—in low‐carbon grids with increasing shares of PECs, but still with a large presence of synchronous machines. These difficulties in dealing with the “new physics” of low‐carbon grids justify the so‐called “bottom‐up” approach “from physics to economics” to define new market and regulatory requirements, services and products (Billimoria et al, 2020; Mancarella & Billimoria, 2021). Examples of such issues are: difficulty in defining physical features of low‐carbon grids (e.g., “system strength” is related to network impedance, voltage/reactive power control, synchronizing torque, inertia, and short‐circuit current—it is not straightforward to even “define” in a clear but comprehensive manner); inseparability of certain services (e.g., a synchronous generator provides fault current, but also inevitably inertia, thus affecting other markets/products); integrality constraints (e.g., an SC can only provide none, or all, of its inertia and fault‐current capacity when off or on, respectively, thus leading to “binary” or “integer” service provision that is not easy to incorporate within market solution algorithms); non‐intuitive stability characteristics of complex hybrid (continuous‐discrete) dynamical systems (e.g., synchronous and PEC‐based technologies); and difficulty in defining whether all security services are actually “public goods,” as historically thought, or whether some of them may have different economic properties (e.g., provision and access to some services may become increasingly “contentious” due to system congestion).…”