examines principal energy policy decisions and their lingering effects, by recounting the historical context surrounding the interplay of law, markets, and technology.
examines principal energy policy decisions and their lingering effects, by recounting the historical context surrounding the interplay of law, markets, and technology.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Robert R. Nordhaus was the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's (FERC) first General Counsel, and later served as General Counsel for the Department of Energy during the Clinton Administration. From 1963 to 1974, he was Assistant Counsel in the Legislative Counsel's Office of the US House of Representatives, where he assisted in drafting many of the nation's prominent legislative programs, including the 1970 Clean Air Act. He was also an adjunct faculty member at George Washington Law School and Georgetown University Law Center.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction 2. Federal energy regulation begins flowing 3. The Supreme Court creates a gap 4. The gap continues: changing electricity markets 5. Natural gas' tortured road from regulation to decontrol 6. Oil shocks, gas lines, and energy policy 7. Carter crowns coal king: coal's war on people 8. Energy eclipsing air 9. Oil, cars and climate 10. Embedded judgments and energy resilient transitions.
1. Introduction 2. Federal energy regulation begins flowing 3. The Supreme Court creates a gap 4. The gap continues: changing electricity markets 5. Natural gas' tortured road from regulation to decontrol 6. Oil shocks, gas lines, and energy policy 7. Carter crowns coal king: coal's war on people 8. Energy eclipsing air 9. Oil, cars and climate 10. Embedded judgments and energy resilient transitions.
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