“…While it is tempting to analytically flesh-out specificities that a permanent Civil energy network environment could bring, particularly on the aspect of (procedural and substantive/distributive) energy justice and (economic/participatory) democratization [15,16,41,58], this is not possible here. The varieties in consequential rules, both in terms of requirements on CES-actor typology, as particular types of legal institutions, and of consequential rules of the Civil energy network concerning lawful interactions between CESs, and between CESs and other public energy service actors (e.g., DSOs, energy regulators, companies, brokers and aggregators, and CES members and other consumers) are simply enormous, certainly if we are open to hybrid outcomes.…”