Do current environmental regulations stifle energy industry innovation? Restrict output in energy markets? Does the current regulatory regime strike the right balance for the energy industry? Appearing: Katharine Bartlett (Dean, Duke University School of Law), moderator; Mary Anne Sullivan (Partner, Hogan & Hartson, LLP), David B. Spence (Professor, University of Texas at Austin McCombs School of Business and Law School), Richard J. Pence Jr. (Professor, The George Washington University Law School), Joseph P. Tomain (Dean, University of Cincinatti College of Law), panelists
This Article develops a novel theory of energy governance and uses it to assess how institutional in...
For many years, the law has largely ignored the obvious connection between energy production and con...
Like many fields, energy law has had its ups and downs. A period of remarkable activity in the 1970s...
Do current environmental regulations stifle energy industry innovation? Restrict output in energy ma...
Do current environmental regulations stifle energy industry innovation? Restrict output in energy ma...
Renewable and nonrenewable energy development on terrestrial public lands is ubiquitous in the Unite...
This chapter reflects on the future of competition and regulation in an area in which renewable ener...
In September 2013, The School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary hosted 19 speakers and 5...
United States energy law and the scholarship analyzing it are deeply fragmented. Each source of ener...
Renewable energy is gaining momentum around the globe, but the United States has only just begun to ...
On April 15, 2011, the San Diego Journal of Climate & Energy Law and the Energy Policy Initiatives C...
In Massachusetts v. EPA (April 2007), the U.S. Supreme Court held that carbon dioxide and other gree...
Wholesale power markets currently face challenges from changes in federal regulations and advancemen...
For many years, the law has largely ignored the obvious connection between energy production and con...
While the importance of innovation in the energy technology arena is widely understood—particularly ...
This Article develops a novel theory of energy governance and uses it to assess how institutional in...
For many years, the law has largely ignored the obvious connection between energy production and con...
Like many fields, energy law has had its ups and downs. A period of remarkable activity in the 1970s...
Do current environmental regulations stifle energy industry innovation? Restrict output in energy ma...
Do current environmental regulations stifle energy industry innovation? Restrict output in energy ma...
Renewable and nonrenewable energy development on terrestrial public lands is ubiquitous in the Unite...
This chapter reflects on the future of competition and regulation in an area in which renewable ener...
In September 2013, The School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary hosted 19 speakers and 5...
United States energy law and the scholarship analyzing it are deeply fragmented. Each source of ener...
Renewable energy is gaining momentum around the globe, but the United States has only just begun to ...
On April 15, 2011, the San Diego Journal of Climate & Energy Law and the Energy Policy Initiatives C...
In Massachusetts v. EPA (April 2007), the U.S. Supreme Court held that carbon dioxide and other gree...
Wholesale power markets currently face challenges from changes in federal regulations and advancemen...
For many years, the law has largely ignored the obvious connection between energy production and con...
While the importance of innovation in the energy technology arena is widely understood—particularly ...
This Article develops a novel theory of energy governance and uses it to assess how institutional in...
For many years, the law has largely ignored the obvious connection between energy production and con...
Like many fields, energy law has had its ups and downs. A period of remarkable activity in the 1970s...