World Shale Gas Resources: An Initial Assessment of 14 Regions Outside the United States. Introductory website and Report. Advanced Resources International, Inc., sponsored by the US Energy Information Administration. April 5, 2011.
Firming Renewable Electric Power Generators: Opportunities and Challenges for Natural Gas Pipelines. Prepared for the INGAA Foundation, Inc., by ICF International. March 16, 2011. 220 pages.
Brown, Garry. Shale Shock: The Revolution in Shale Gas Recovery, Electricity Markets the Green Agenda. Presentation to the Harvard Electricity Policy Group's Fifty-Seventh Plenary Session. Austin, TX. December 10, 2009. 12 pages.
Mall, Amy. Environmental Impacts of Oil and Gas Production. Presentation to the Harvard Electricity Policy Group's Fifty-Seventh Plenary Session. Austin, TX. December 10, 2009. 32 pages.
Shelk, John. Shale Shock: The Revolution in Shale Gas Recovery, Electricity Markets the Green Agenda. Presentation to the Harvard Electricity Policy Group's Fifty-Seventh Plenary Session. Austin, TX. December 10, 2009. 22 pages.
California Public Utilities Commission. Rulemaking on the Commission's Own Motion to Assess and Revise the Regulatory Structure Governing California's Natural Gas Industry. Filed Public Utilities Commission, January 21, 1998. San Francisco Office. R.98-01-011.
Address:
Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government
John F. Kennedy School of Government
79 John F. Kennedy Street, Box 84
Cambridge, MA 02138
Raymond Plank Professor of Global Energy Policy Research Director
Professor Hogan is Research Director of the Harvard Electricity Policy Group (HEPG), which is exploring the issues involved in the transition to a more competitive electricity market. Previously he has served as Chair of the Kennedy School Appointments Committee, Director of Graduate Studies for the Ph.D. Program in Public Policy and the Ph.D. Program in Political Economy and Government at the Kennedy School of Government, Chair of the Public Policy Program, Director of the Repsol YPF - Harvard Kennedy School Fellows Program for energy policy research, a member of the organizing committee for the Repsol YPF-Harvard Energy Policy Seminar, and as Director of the Energy and Environmental Policy Center.
Professor Hogan has been actively engaged in the design and improvement of competitive electricity markets in many regions of the United States, as well as around the world, from England to Australia. His activities include designing the market structures and market rules by which regional transmission organizations, in various forms, coordinate bid-based markets for energy, ancillary services, and financial transmission rights. This research is also part of the larger activities on the future of energy and energy policy research at Harvard University through the Environment and Natural Resources Policy Program, Environmental Economics Program, Harvard University Center for the Environment, and the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government.
William W. Hogan
Raymond Plank Professor of Global Energy Policy
Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government
John F. Kennedy School of Government
79 John F. Kennedy Street
Cambridge, MA 02138