No photo of Hamish George Ritchie

Hamish George Ritchie

LLB, LLM

  • Karen Blixens Plads 16

    2300 København S

Personal profile

Short presentation

Hamish's PhD thesis is titled "The translation of sectoral regulation for electricity in Danish and English contract law: An analysis of the capacity of commercial contract law to respond to constraints inherent to the retail electricity supply market". Supervised by Ole Hansen, the project explores the relationship between contract law and the liberalised electricity supply market in Denmark and England through studying the influence of systemic public interest considerations on private contractual relations.

Due to physical constraints and infrastructure requirements, electricity supply systems are ill-suited to incubate competition. In the policy movement towards liberalisation, inescapable base conditions imply the need for regulatory controls of market behaviour to realise public ends.  Additionally, despite efforts to isolate wholesale and retail power markets, there remains a clear connection to the physical market in retail supply relationships. Indeed, supply contracts are expressly relied upon as a governance tool within the market. Accordingly, regardless of the regulatory choices made for designing retail supply arrangements, there is an inescapable connection between the supply contract and regulation within liberalised supply markets. However, despite extensive sectoral regulation, concrete transactions between suppliers and end users remain contractual in essence. Thus, conditions for supply are found within the applicable contractual terms and are controlled by contract law. Nonetheless, the regulatory framework clearly has potential private law implications. These implications cannot be excluded entirely from contract law, due to the use of contract law to perform public functions in a liberalised supply paradigm. In this sense, contract law is exposed to the dual rationalities of the supply market: the regulatory control of behaviour (regulation) and the concurrent need for free competition (facilitation).  

The project considers the opaque relationship between contracts, contract law, and regulation in this context. A model of translation, as an operative process, is developed to provide a means of systematising the manner through which public norms come to be considered within contract law. Overall, this is to an end of promoting legal certainty and the rule of law, which in turn support efficient markets and thus public policy goals fundamental to the legitimacy of the liberalisation process. Concurrently, the capacity of contract law to foster such a translation within existing doctrinal structures is also considered.

Hamish holds an LLB (First Class Honours) in Scots law from the University of Glasgow. He also holds an LLM from the University of Copenhagen.

Prior to starting his PhD, he  worked in CEPRI as a research assistant primarily focusing on energy, with a particular emphasis on electricity market structures, the uptake of developing renewable energy technologies and the private governance of essential services.

Fields of interest

Energy law

Private Governance

Environmental law

Contract law