Competitive Market Models
Content tagged with Competitive Market Models
Not finding what you're looking for? Try using Advanced Search.
Not finding what you're looking for? Try using Advanced Search.
Resource
EXCERPT FROM THE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The future of the U.S. electricity sector is hard to foresee – and it is never wise to overpay one’s fortune tellers – but there appear to be some key trends and technologies that may reshape future electricity markets...
Special Session
Resource
April 4, 2001 Killing the Golden Goose? Session One - The Fallout from California. Session Two - Looking Ahead While Looking Back.
Twenty-Ninth Plenary Session
Resource
September 26-27, 2002 Session One - Working to Make Working Markets. Session Two - Energy Trading: Promoting Efficiency or Profiting from Manipulation? Session Three - The State of Retail Competition: A Failed Experiment, or an Essential Reform Just...
Thirty-Third Plenary Session
Resource
December 11-12, 2003 Session One - Overcoming Market Failures Without Overturning Markets. Session Two - Active Markets and Reactive Policies: Requirements, Rules, Incentives and Business Models for Reactive Power. Session Three - Retail Competition in...
Forty-Fifth Plenary Session
Resource
November 30 and December 1, 2006 Session One - Regulators: "Fired" With Enthusiasm Session Two - RTO: Fox or Hedgehog? Session Three - PUHCA Repealed!! Has Anyone Noticed?
Forty-Ninth Plenary Session
Resource
December 6-7, 2007 Session One - Commitment: It's Getting Better All the Time with MIP. Session Two - The Impact of Competition on Electricity Prices: Can We Discern a Pattern? Session Three - Allocating Carbon Emission Allowances: Who Gets What and How?
Forty-Eighth Plenary Session
Resource
October 4-5, 2007 Session One - Ample Opportunity, Ample Risks: The Dilemma of Generating Companies Trying To Make Prudent, Needed Investment in the Context of Climate Change Uncertainty. Session Two - Retail Procurement: In Search of No Fault Default...
Sixty-Second Plenary Session
Resource
FEBRUARY 24-25, 2011 Session One - Lowering Prices by Raising Costs: When Do Targeted Subsidies Create an Existential Threat to Open Markets? Session Two - Easier Said Than Done: The Continuing Saga of Moving from Principle to Practice in Crafting...
Forty-Sixth Plenary Session
Resource
March 15-16, 2007 Session One - Courts, Contracts and Competition Session Two - A Consensus of Inaction: Demand Side Opportunities and Consumer Culture Session Three - Transmission Chickens and Alternative Energy Eggs
Fiftieth Plenary Session
Resource
February 28-29, 2008 Session One - Federal Transmission Corridors The New Federal Role in Siting: Too Little? Too Much? Just Right? or Largely Irrelevant? Session Two - Monopsony Manipulation: No Cost is Too High to Get Low Prices Session Three - Risky...
Bibliographic References tagged with Competitive Market Models
Not finding what you're looking for? Try using Advanced Search.
Not finding what you're looking for? Try using Advanced Search.
O’Neill, Richard. “‘Idiosyncratic Assets, Interconnected Markets and Arbitrage.’”. In.
O’Neill, Richard. “‘Idiosyncratic Assets, Interconnected Markets and Arbitrage.’”. In.
Cusenza, Paul. “ Forward Trading in Electricity Markets: Benefits, Costs and Challenges.”. In.
Cusenza, Paul. “ Forward Trading in Electricity Markets: Benefits, Costs and Challenges.”. In.
Arkin, Zander. “Benefits of Cometition”, 1995.
Arkin, Zander. “Benefits of Cometition”, 1995.
Council, The Electricity Consumers Resource. “TODAY’S ORGANIZED MARKETS – A STEP TOWARD COMPETITION OR AN EXERCISE IN RE-REGULATION?”. In.
Council, The Electricity Consumers Resource. “TODAY’S ORGANIZED MARKETS – A STEP TOWARD COMPETITION OR AN EXERCISE IN RE-REGULATION?”. In.
Cicala, Steve. “Imperfect Markets versus Imperfect Regulation in U.S. Electricity”. In.
Cicala, Steve. “Imperfect Markets versus Imperfect Regulation in U.S. Electricity”. In.
Alexander, Barbara. “Should Ratepayers Subsidize Uneconomic Assets in Restructured Markets?.”
Alexander, Barbara. “Should Ratepayers Subsidize Uneconomic Assets in Restructured Markets?.”
Linares, Pedro, Francisco Javier Santos, Mariano Ventosa, and Luis Lapiedra. “Incorporating Oligopoly, CO2 Emissions Trading and Green Certificates into a Power Generation Expansion Model”. Automatica 44, no. 6 (2008): 1608-20.
Linares, Pedro, Francisco Javier Santos, Mariano Ventosa, and Luis Lapiedra. “Incorporating Oligopoly, CO2 Emissions Trading and Green Certificates into a Power Generation Expansion Model”. Automatica 44, no. 6 (2008): 1608-20.
McKibbin, Warwick, Adele Morris, and Peter Wilcoxen. “THE ROLE OF BORDER CARBON ADJUSTMENTS IN A U.S. CARBON T AX”. In.
McKibbin, Warwick, Adele Morris, and Peter Wilcoxen. “THE ROLE OF BORDER CARBON ADJUSTMENTS IN A U.S. CARBON T AX”. In.