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Critical Issues in Energy
An Economic Forum for College and University Faculty
November 2, 2006
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Energy prices have been on an
upward trajectory for four years, prompting worries
about the world economy plunging into an energy crisis.
Is the era of cheap energy over? How important are geopolitical
factors? Where does the debate stand on global warming?
What’s at stake with a national energy policy?
These questions have far-reaching consequences that
affect everyone.
Critical Issues in Energy,
a one-day conference hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas, will address these concerns. Specific topics
will include:
- Considerations and Compromises in Developing
a National Energy Policy
- Geopolitics of World Energy
- Effects of Oil Prices on the U.S. Economy
- Global Warming
- What’s Driving Natural Gas Prices?
- What’s Driving Oil Prices?
- The Economics of Energy Efficiency
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Agenda
8:00
a.m. |
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Breakfast |
8:30
a.m. |
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Welcome
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Helen Holcomb
First Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
8:35
a.m |
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Considerations
and Compromises in Developing a National Energy
Policy [PDF] |
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Shirley J. Neff
Adjunct Lecturer and Research Scholar
Center for Energy, Marine Transportation and Public
Policy
Columbia University |
9:30
a.m. |
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Geopolitics of World Energy [PDF] |
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Amy Myers Jaffe
Wallace S. Wilson Fellow in Energy Studies
Baker Institute for Public Policy
Rice University
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Kenneth B. Medlock
III
Fellow in Energy Studies
Baker Institute for Public Policy
Rice University |
10:25
a.m. |
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Break |
10:40
a.m. |
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Effects of Oil Prices on the
U.S. Economy |
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Frederick L. Joutz
Director, Research Program on Forecasting
Department of Economics
The George Washington University |
11:35
a.m. |
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Global
Warming [PDF] |
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John P. Weyant
Professor, Department of Management Science and
Engineering
Stanford University |
12:30
p.m. |
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Lunch |
1:30
p.m. |
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Economic
Issues of Energy Efficiency [PDF] |
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James L. Sweeney
Professor of Management Science and Engineering
Stanford University |
2:25
p.m. |
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What’s
Driving Natural Gas Prices? [PDF] |
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Stephen P. A. Brown
Director of Energy Economics and Microeconomic Policy
Analysis
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
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Mine K. Yücel
Vice President and Senior Economist
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
3:20
p.m. |
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What’s
Driving Oil Prices? [PDF] |
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James L. Smith
Cary M. Maguire Chair of Oil and Gas Management
Cox School of Business
Southern Methodist University |
4:15
p.m. |
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Adjourn |
About the Speakers
Stephen P. A. Brown
Director of Energy Economics and
Microeconomic Policy Analysis
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Brown joined the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas in 1981 after working as an energy
economist for Brookhaven National Laboratory and teaching
economics at several universities. He is currently an
adjunct professor of economics at Southern Methodist
University and Tulane University. Brown has authored
numerous articles appearing in such publications as
Economic Inquiry, Review of Regional Studies, Quarterly
Review of Economics and Finance and The Energy
Journal, among others. Brown holds a B.S. in economics
from California Polytechnic State University and an
M.A. and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of
Maryland.
Amy Myers Jaffe
Wallace S. Wilson Fellow in Energy Studies
Baker Institute for Public Policy
Rice University
Jaffe is the associate director
of the Rice University Energy Program. She leads the
Baker Institute Energy Forum and focuses her research
on oil geopolitics, strategic energy policy, energy
science policy and energy economics. Jaffe served as
an advisor to the U.S. National Intelligence Council
Study on Energy to 2015. She also served as project
director for the Baker Institute/Council on Foreign
Relations task force on strategic energy policy and
was a principal advisor to USAID’s project on
Options for Developing a Long-Term Sustainable Iraqi
Oil Industry. Prior to joining the Baker Institute,
Jaffe was the senior editor and Middle East analyst
for Petroleum Intelligence Weekly. She has
appeared on the “MacNeil Lehrer NewsHour,”
CNN, FOX and MSNBC. She is widely published in academic
journals, including National Interest, Survival,
Foreign Affairs and a chapter in the Encyclopedia
of Energy. She is co-editor of two books, The
Geopolitics of Natural Gas and Energy in the
Caspian Region: Present and Future. She holds a
B.A. in Near Eastern and Arabic studies from Princeton
University.
Frederick L. Joutz
Director, Research Program on Forecasting
Department of Economics
The George Washington University
Joutz has taught econometrics,
forecasting macroeconomics, money and banking, and energy
economics at The George Washington University since
1988. He has served as a consultant and technical expert
to several federal government agencies and private corporations,
where he wrote research reports, conducted market analyses,
developed econometric models and forecasts, provided
technical support, and conducted technical workshops
and training sessions. Joutz has also taught at Oberlin
College and worked for the think tank Resources for
the Future. He served as an associate editor for Energy
Economics and International Journal of Forecasting.
He contributes quarterly forecasts of about 25 U.S.
macroeconomic variables to the Federal Reserve Bank
of Philadelphia’s Survey of Professional Forecasters
and the Economic Survey International. Joutz received
an M.A. in economics from the University of British
Columbia and a Ph.D. in economics from the University
of Washington.
Kenneth B. Medlock III
Fellow in Energy Studies
Baker Institute for Public Policy
Rice University
Medlock is a research fellow
in energy studies at the James A. Baker III Institute
for Public Policy and adjunct assistant professor in
the economics department at Rice University. He is a
principal in the Baker Institute ’s development
of the Rice World Natural Gas Trade Model. Previously,
Medlock was a corporate consultant at El Paso Energy
Corp., where he was responsible for analysis of North
American natural gas, petroleum and power markets. He
also served on the modeling subgroup for the National
Petroleum Council study of long-term natural gas markets
in North America. Medlock’s articles appear in
such publications as the Encyclopedia of Energy,
The Energy Journal, Journal of Transport Economics and
Policy and International Association of Energy Economics
Newsletter. He recently completed a Baker Institute
study on “The Energy Security Value of Nuclear
Power in Japan.” Medlock holds a Ph.D. in economics
from Rice University.
Shirley J. Neff
Adjunct Lecturer and Research Scholar
Center for Energy, Marine Transportation
and Public Policy
Columbia University
In addition to her position
at Columbia University, Neff is president of the U.S.
Association for Energy Economics (USAEE), executive
director of the New York Energy Forum and an advisor
to the Center for Energy Economics at the Bureau of
Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin. Neff
was the economist for the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy
and Natural Resources for seven years (1993–96
and 1999–2003). She was also a senior governmental
affairs director for Shell in 1996–98 and was
the director of government relations and policy for
the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America, 1989–93.
In 2001, she served on an energy policy task force for
the Council on Foreign Relations. She has received the
Key Women in Energy–Global award and in 2003 was
a recipient of USAEE’s Senior Fellow Award. Neff
earned a B.S. from Iowa State University and an M.S.
in economics from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
James L. Smith
Cary M. Maguire Chair of Oil and Gas Management
Cox School of Business
Southern Methodist University
Smith has held the Cary M.
Maguire Chair of Oil and Gas Management at Southern
Methodist University since 1995. Before joining SMU,
he taught at the University of Houston, the University
of Maryland and the University of Illinois. Smith’s
publications on various aspects of energy economics
and management have appeared in numerous academic and
trade journals, including American Economic Review,
Journal of Economic Theory, Quarterly Journal of Economics,
Economic Journal, Oil and Gas Journal and World
Oil. He is editor of The Energy Journal.
His current research focuses on the international oil
market, auction theory, and energy finance and risk
management. Smith has been a consultant for several
large oil and gas corporations and for the Department
of Energy. He serves on the executive council of the
U.S. Association for Energy Economics. He is also a
research associate of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology’s Center for Energy and Environmental
Policy Research. Smith is the recipient of several teaching
awards at SMU. He holds an M.A. and a Ph.D. in economics
from Harvard University.
James L. Sweeney
Professor of Management Science and Engineering
Stanford University
Sweeney is a senior fellow
of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research;
senior fellow of the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution
and Peace; and senior fellow of the Stanford Institute
for International Studies. His professional activities
focus on economic policy and analysis, particularly
in energy, natural resources and the environment. He
is the author of The California Electricity Crisis
and co-editor of the three-volume Handbook of Natural
Resource and Energy Economics. His articles have
appeared in numerous books and journals, including Econometrica,
Journal of Economic Theory and Resources and
Energy. He was a founding member of the International
Association for Energy Economics. He is a senior fellow
of the U.S. Association for Energy Economics and a fellow
of the California Council on Science and Technology.
He periodically serves as a consultant or advisor to
ExxonMobil Corp., Cornerstone Research, the Environmental
Protection Agency, the Department of Energy and other
organizations. He holds a Ph.D. from Stanford University
in engineering-economic systems.
John P. Weyant
Professor, Department of Management Science
and Engineering
Stanford University
Weyant began working at Stanford
in 1977, primarily to develop the Energy Modeling Forum.
He was formerly a senior research associate in the Department
of Operations Research, a member of the Stanford International
Energy Project and a fellow in the U.S.–Northeast
Asia Forum on International Policy. He is an adviser
to the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection
Agency and Pacific Gas & Electric Co. His current
research focuses on global climate change, energy security,
corporate strategy analysis and Japanese energy policy.
Weyant is on the editorial boards of The Energy
Journal and Petroleum Management. His
national society memberships include the American Economics
Association, Association for Public Policy Analysis
and Management, Econometric Society and International
Association of Energy Economists. Weyant received a
Ph.D. in management science from the University of California
at Berkeley and was a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard
University.
Mine K. Yücel
Vice President and Senior Economist
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
As an energy economist and
head of the Bank’s regional group, Yücel
analyzes the regional economy and energy markets and
has published numerous articles on energy and regional
growth. She is past president of the U.S. Association
for Energy Economics (USAEE), past president of the
Dallas Economists Club and a member of the American
Economic Association and International Association for
Energy Economics. She has served on the executive boards
of the USAEE and the Dallas Chapter of Women in Technology
International Inc. In 2006, Yücel was chosen as
one of the recipients of the Key Women in Energy–Global
award. Currently, she serves on the Greater Dallas Chamber’s
Life Sciences Committee and the Chamber’s Board
of Economists. Before joining the Bank in 1989, she
was an assistant professor of economics at Louisiana
State University. Yücel has a B.S. and M.S. in
mathematics from Bogazici University in Istanbul, Turkey,
and a Ph.D. in economics from Rice University.
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