Erin T. Mansur |
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Tuck School of Business 100 Tuck Hall Dartmouth College Hanover, NH 03755 Office: 102 Buchanan Hall Phone: (603) 646-2398 Fax: (603) 646-0995 erin.mansur@dartmouth.edu
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Presentations INVITED PRESENTATIONS: University of Albany: “Regularization from Economic Constraints: A New Estimator for Marginal Emissions,” March. Michigan State University: “Electrification in the Long Run,” September. University of California at Berkeley, Energy Institute at Haas: “On the Feasibility, Costs and Benefits of an Immediate Phaseout of Coal for U.S. Electricity Generation,” June. Harvard University: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” April. Georgia State University: “On the Feasibility, Costs and Benefits of an Immediate Phaseout of Coal for U.S. Electricity Generation,” March. American Economic Association Meetings: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” January. University of Mannheim: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” November. London School of Economics: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” October. Paris School of Economics: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” October. Toulouse School of Economics: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” September. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” September. National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy Economics: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” July. University of Calgary's Electricity Camp in the Rockies: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” June. Cornell University: “Decarbonization and Electrification in the Long Run,” April. University of Wisconsin: “Electrification in the Long Run,” April. Arizona State University (virtual): “Why Are Marginal CO2 Emissions Increasing for U.S. Electricity? Estimates and Implications for Climate Policy,” March. American Economic Association Meetings (virtual): “Why Are Marginal CO2 Emissions Increasing for U.S. Electricity? Estimates and Implications for Climate Policy,” January. 2019
Columbia University: “Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning,” December. Indiana University, Bloomington: “Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning,” December. University of Hawaii, Manoa: “Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning,” November. University of Massachusetts, Amherst: “Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning,” October. University of Chicago: “Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning,” June. NBER Economics of Energy Use in Transportation Conference: “Environmental Benefits from Transportation Electrification,” May. University of Maryland: “Decompositions and Policy Consequences of an Extraordinary Decline in Air Pollution from Electricity Generation,” April. University of Illinois Urbana-Champlain: “Decompositions and Policy Consequences of an Extraordinary Decline in Air Pollution from Electricity Generation,” April. National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy Economics: “Decompositions and Policy Consequences of an Extraordinary Decline in Air Pollution from Electricity Generation,” March. Carnegie Mellon University: “Decompositions and Policy Consequences of an Extraordinary Decline in Air Pollution from Electricity Generation,” March. Tufts University: “Decompositions and Policy Consequences of an Extraordinary Decline in Air Pollution from Electricity Generation,” February. Harvard University: “Decompositions and Policy Consequences of an Extraordinary Decline in Air Pollution from Electricity Generation,” February. Boston University: “Decompositions and Policy Consequences of an Extraordinary Decline in Air Pollution from Electricity Generation,” February. 2018
Duke University / North Carolina State University / RTI International (TREE Seminar Series): “The Remarkable Decline in Air Pollution from the US Electricity Sector over 2010-2017,” October. London School of Economics: “Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning,” June. 2017
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute: “Distributional Effects of Air Pollution from Electric Vehicle Adoption,” November. University of Oxford: “Distributional Effects of Air Pollution from Electric Vehicle Adoption,” October. McGill University's Workshop on the Applications of Industrial Organization: “Distributional Effects of Air Pollution from Electric Vehicle Adoption,” September Energy Institute at Haas: “Electric Vehicle Adoption with Technological Advances,” June. 2016
Imperial College Business School: “Distributional Effects of Air Pollution from Electric Vehicle Adoption,” December. University of Oslo: “Distributional Effects of Air Pollution from Electric Vehicle Adoption,” December. University of Mannheim: “Distributional Effects of Air Pollution from Electric Vehicle Adoption,” December. Wharton: “Geographic Dispersion of Economic Shocks: Evidence from the Fracking Revolution,” October. Institute for the Study of Labor: “Geographic Dispersion of Economic Shocks: Evidence from the Fracking Revolution,” September. University of Stavanger: “Geographic Dispersion of Economic Shocks: Evidence from the Fracking Revolution,” June. MIT CEEPR: “Are There Environmental Benefits from Driving Electric Vehicles? The Importance of Local Factors” May. Harvard University: “Are There Environmental Benefits from Driving Electric Vehicles? The Importance of Local Factors” February. Yale University: “Geographic Dispersion of Economic Shocks: Evidence from the Fracking Revolution,” February. Williams College: “Are There Environmental Benefits from Driving Electric Vehicles? The Importance of Local Factors,” February.
University of California at Davis: “Geographic Dispersion of Economic Shocks: Evidence from the Fracking Revolution,” November. University of Michigan: “Are There Environmental Benefits from Driving Electric Vehicles? The Importance of Local Factors” October. University of Connecticut: “Are There Environmental Benefits from Driving Electric Vehicles? The Importance of Local Factors” October. Columbia University: “Geographic Dispersion of Economic Shocks: Evidence from the Fracking Revolution,” October. Calgary Renewable Electricity Conference: “Inferring Carbon Abatement Costs in Electricity Markets: A Revealed Preference Approach using the Shale Revolution,” May. Northeast Workshop on Energy Policy and Environmental Economics (Yale): “Inferring Carbon Abatement Costs in Electricity Markets: A Revealed Preference Approach using the Shale Revolution,” May. National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy Economics: “Measuring the Spatial Heterogeneity in Environmental Externalities from Driving: A Comparison of Gasoline and Electric Vehicles," March. World Bank: “Inferring Carbon Abatement Costs in Electricity Markets: A Revealed Preference Approach using the Shale Revolution,” March. Yale University: “Inferring Carbon Abatement Costs in Electricity Markets: A Revealed Preference Approach using the Shale Revolution,” February.
2014
Stanford EMF: "Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning Penetration," December. Middlebury College: "Will Carbon Prices Reduce Emissions in the US Electricity Industry? Evidence from the Shale Gas Experience," November. Colby College: "The Economics of the Shale Revolution," November. Energy Institute at Haas: "Where is My Fracking Job? Measuring Local Employment and Income Spillovers from the Shale Gas Boom," June. Energy Institute at Haas: "Will Carbon Prices Reduce Emissions in the US Electricity Industry? Evidence from the Shale Gas Experience," June. Research Institute of Industrial Economics, Sweden: "Will Carbon Prices Reduce Emissions in the US Electricity Industry? Evidence from the Shale Gas Experience," June. International
Industrial Organization Conference: "Will
Carbon Prices Reduce Emissions in the US
Electricity Industry? Evidence from the Shale Gas Experience,"
April. Stanford EMF: "Technology Adoption as Climate Adaptation: Evidence from US Air Conditioning Penetration," December. University of Colorado-Boulder: “Will Carbon Prices Reduce Emissions in the US Electricity Industry? Evidence from the Shale Gas Experience,” December. MIT CEEPR: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and Other Electricity-Shifting Policies,” November. Energy Institute at Haas:“Vertical Commitments and the Price-Effects of Mergers: The Exelon-Constellation Merger,” (presented with Jim Bushnell) June. International
Industrial Organization Conference: “Vertical Commitments and the Price
Effects of Mergers: Evidence from Electricity Markets,” May. Harvard
University: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal Emissions:
Implications for Electric Cars and Other Electricity-Shifting
Policies,” May. University
of Maryland: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal Emissions:
Implications for Electric Cars and Other Electricity-Shifting
Policies,” April. Resources
for the Future: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal
Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and Other
Electricity-Shifting Policies,” April. Environmental
Protection Agency: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal
Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and Other
Electricity-Shifting Policies,” April. Department
of Justice: “Vertical Commitments and the Price Effects of Mergers:
Evidence from Electricity Markets,” April. Princeton
University: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal Emissions:
Implications for Electric Cars and Other Electricity-Shifting
Policies,” April. National
Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy Economics:
“Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal Emissions: Implications
for Electric Cars and Other Electricity-Shifting Policies,” March. Georgia
Institute of Technology: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of
Marginal Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and Other
Electricity-Shifting Policies,” March. University
of Tennessee at Knoxville: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of
Marginal Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and Other
Electricity-Shifting Policies,” March. Carnegie
Mellon University: “Vertical Commitments and the Price Effects of
Mergers: Evidence from Electricity Markets,” January. Carnegie
Mellon University: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal
Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and Other
Electricity-Shifting Policies,” January. University
of Chicago: “Vertical Commitments and the Price Effects of Mergers:
Evidence from Electricity Markets,” December. University
of Guelph: “Vertical Commitments and the Price Effects of Mergers:
Evidence from Electricity Markets,” November. Washington
University in Saint Louis: “Vertical Commitments and the Price Effects
of Mergers: Evidence from Electricity Markets,” November. Lincoln
Institute of Land Policy: “Costly Blackouts? Measuring Productivity and
Environmental Effects of Electricity Shortages,” October. HEC
Montreal, CIRPEE Conference on Industrial Organization: “Vertical
Position and Price Effects of Mergers in Electricity Markets,” July. University of California at Berkeley, Energy Institute at Haas: “How Stringent is the EPA’s Proposed
Carbon Pollution Standard for New Power Plants?” June. University of California at Berkeley, Energy Institute at Haas: “Temporal and Spatial Heterogeneity in
Marginal Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and other
Electricity-Shifting Policies,” June. University of California at Berkeley, Energy Institute at Haas: “Vertical Position and Price Effects of
Mergers in Electricity Markets,” (presented with Jim Bushnell) June. National
Bureau of Economic Research Climate Adaptation Conference: “Measuring
Climatic Impacts on Energy Expenditures: A Review of the Empirical
Literature,” (presented with Max Auffhammer) May. Northeast
Workshop on Energy Policy and Environmental Economics (Cornell):
“Temporal and
Spatial Heterogeneity in Marginal Emissions: Implications for Electric
Cars and other Electricity-Shifting Policies,” May. Austin
Electricity Conference: “How Stringent is the EPA’s Proposed Carbon
Pollution Standard for New Power Plants?” April. University of California at Berkeley, Energy Institute at Haas, POWER Conference: “Do Local Energy Prices and
Regulation Affect the Geographic Concentration of Employment? A Border
Pairs Approach,” March. Yale
University: “Do Local Energy Prices and Regulation Affect the
Geographic Concentration of Employment? A Border Pairs Approach,” April. University
of Michigan: “How Do Energy Prices,
and Labor and Environmental Regulations Affect Local Manufacturing
Employment Dynamics? A Regression Discontinuity Approach,” April. University
of Alberta: “How Do Energy Prices,
and Labor and Environmental Regulations Affect Local Manufacturing
Employment Dynamics? A Regression Discontinuity Approach,” March. American
Economic Association Meetings: “Vertical Targeting: Issues in
Implementing Upstream versus Downstream Regulation,” January. American
Economic Association Meetings: “How Do Energy Prices,
and Labor and Environmental Regulations Affect Local Manufacturing
Employment Dynamics? A Regression Discontinuity Approach,” January. Amherst
College: “How Do Energy Prices,
and Labor and Environmental Regulations Affect Local Manufacturing
Employment Dynamics? A Regression Discontinuity Approach,” December. University
of National
Bureau of Economic Research Climate Conference, Washington DC:
“Upstream versus Downstream Implementation of Climate Policy,” May. Boston University: “Profiting from Regulation: An Event Study of the European Carbon Market,” April Massachusetts
Institute of Technology: “Profiting from Regulation: An Event Study of
the European Carbon Market,” April. University of California at Berkeley, Energy Institute at Haas, POWER Conference: “Profiting from
Regulation: An Event Study of the European Carbon Market,” March. National
Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy Economics:
“Costly Blackouts? Measuring Productivity and Environmental Effects of
Electricity Shortages,” March. American
Economic Association Meetings: “Profiting from Regulation: An Event
Study of the European Carbon Market,” January. American
Economic Association Meetings: “Costly Blackouts? Measuring
Productivity and Environmental Effects of Electricity Shortages,”
January. National
Bureau of Economic Research, Industrial Organization: “Market
Organization and Efficiency in Electricity Markets,” July. University
of California Energy Institute: “Firms’ Costs (and Benefits) of
Environmental Regulation: An Event Study of the EU Emission Trading
Scheme,” (presented with Jim Bushnell and Howard Chong) June. University
of California Energy Institute: “Energy Prices and Manufacturing
Agglomeration,” (presented with Matt Kahn) June. Industry
Studies Annual Conference: “Market Organization and Efficiency in
Electricity Markets,” May. Environmental
Defense Fund: “Firms' Costs (and Benefits) of Environmental Regulation:
An Event Study of the EU Emission Trading Scheme,” (presented with Jim
Bushnell) April. International
Industrial Organization Conference: “Market Organization and Efficiency
in Electricity Markets,” April. University
of California Energy Institute: “Evaluating Emissions Trading Using a
Nearest (Polluting) Neighbor Estimator,” (presented with Meredith
Fowlie and Stephen Holland) June. University
of California Energy Institute: “Costly Blackouts? Measuring
Productivity and Environmental Effects of Electricity Shortages,” June. University
of California-Berkeley / University of California Energy Institute:
“Market Organization and Efficiency in Electricity Markets,” January. University
of California Energy Institute: “Market Organization and Efficiency in
Electricity Markets,” (presented with Matt White) June. National
Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental Economics: “Averting
Enforcement: Strategic Response to the Threat of Environmental
Regulation,” (presented with Nat Keohane) April. Resources
for the Future: “Averting Enforcement: Strategic Response to the Threat
of Environmental Regulation,” November. University
of California Energy Institute: “Market Organization, Price Discovery,
and Market Efficiency: Empirical Evidence from Electricity Markets,”
June. University
of California Energy Institute: “Nearest (Polluting) Neighbor
Estimates: An Empirical Assessment of the RECLAIM Market,” (presented
with Meredith Fowlie and Stephen Holland) June. Massachusetts
Institute of Technology: “Vertical Arrangements, Market Structure, and
Competition: An Analysis of National
Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental Economics: “A
Discrete-Continuous Choice Model of Climate Change Impacts on Energy,”
August. University
of California Energy Institute: “A Discrete-Continuous Choice Model of
Climate Change Impacts on Energy,” June. Resources
for the Future: “A Discrete-Continuous Choice Model of Climate Change
Impacts on Energy,” March. National
Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental Economics: “Environmental
Regulation in Oligopoly Markets: A Study of Electricity Restructuring,”
August. University
of California Energy Institute: “The Political Economy and
Environmental Effects of Realtime
Pricing Adoption in Competitive Electricity Markets,” (presented with
Stephen Holland) June. University
of California Energy Institute: “Prices vs. Quantities for
Environmental Regulation in Oligopoly Markets,” June. International
Industrial Organization Conference: “Market Structure and Competition:
A Cross-Market Analysis of International
Industrial Organization Conference: “Is Real-Time Pricing Green?: The Environmental Impacts of
Electricity Demand Variance,” (presented with Stephen Holland) April. National
Bureau of Economic Research, Industrial Organization: “Environmental
Regulation in Oligopoly Markets: A Study of Electricity Restructuring,”
February. American
Economic Association Meetings: “Vertical Integration in Restructured
Electricity Markets: Measuring Market Efficiency and Firm Conduct,”
January. University
of California Energy Institute: “Raising Rivals’ Costs in the RECLAIM
Permit Market,” (presented with Meredith Fowlie and Stephen Holland)
August. University
of California Energy Institute POWER Conference: “Is Real-Time Pricing
Green?: The Environmental
Impacts of Electricity Demand Variance,” March. World
Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists: “The Impact of
Retail Rate Deregulation on Electricity Consumption in University
of California-Irvine: “Environmental Regulation in Oligopoly Markets: A
Study of Electricity Restructuring,” June. University
of California Energy Institute POWER Conference: “Environmental
Regulation in Oligopoly Markets: A Study of Electricity Restructuring,”
March. Resources
for the Future: “Environmental Regulation in Oligopoly Markets: A Study
of Electricity Restructuring,” January. University
of Indiana-Bloomington, Electric
Utilities Environmental Conference: “Environmental Implications of
Market Power in Wholesale Electricity Markets: Examining the National
Atmospheric Deposition Program, Technical Committee Meeting: “The
Environmental Effects of SO2 Trading and
Banking,” October. Electric
Utilities Environmental Conference: “The Environmental Effects of SO2
Trading and Banking,” January. DISCUSSANT: 2022 National Bureau of Economic Research, Economics of Innovation in the Energy Sector,
Cambridge 2022 Energy Institute at Haas POWER Conference,
Berkeley 2022 Allied Social Science Association Meetings, AEA Session, virtual 2021 Allied Social Science Association Meetings, AEA Session, virtual 2020 Allied Social Science Association Meetings, AEA Session, San Diego, CA 2019 National Bureau of Economic Research, Economics of Electricity Markets and Regulation Workshop, Incline Village, NV 2017 Allied
Social Science Association Meetings,
Chicago 2016
Energy
Institute at Haas POWER Conference, 2015 Allied Social Science Association Meetings (x2), AEA Session, Boston, MA 2014 National Bureau of Economic Research, Industrial Organization Summer Meetings, Cambridge, MA 2014 IFN Stockholm Conference on The Performance of Electricity Markets, Sweden 2014 International Industrial Organization Conference, Chicago, IL 2014 Allied Social Science Association Meetings (x2), AEA Session, Philadelphia, PA
2013
National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy
Economics Summer Meetings, Cambridge, MA 2013 International Industrial Organization Conference, Boston, MA 2012
National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy
Economics Summer Meetings, Cambridge, MA 2011
Green Building, the Economy, and Public Policy Conference, Maastricht,
Netherlands 2011
Allied Social Science Association Meetings, AEA Session, Denver, CO 2010
National Bureau of Economic Research Climate Conference, Washington DC 2009
National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy
Economics Spring Meetings, Cambridge, MA 2007
National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental and Energy
Economics Summer Meetings, Cambridge, MA 2007
National Bureau of Economic Research, Industrial Organization Summer
Meetings, 2007
Allied Social Science Association Meetings, TPUG Session, 2006
National Bureau of Economic Research, Industrial Organization Summer
Meetings, 2006
National Bureau of Economic Research, Environmental Economics Spring
Meetings, 2006
Allied Social Science Association Meetings, CSWEP Session, 2005
National Bureau of Economic Research, Regulation Conference, 2005
University of California Energy Institute POWER Conference, 2004
International Industrial Organization Conference, 2004
Allied Social Science Association Meetings, TPUG Session, 2002
World Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists,
Other
Presentations
Dartmouth Business and Environment Research Workshop: “Will Carbon Prices Reduce Emissions in the US Electricity Industry? Evidence from the Shale Gas Experience,” January 2014 The Professor Richard S. Bower Finance, Economics, Accounting Seminar Series at Tuck: “Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Marginal Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and Other Electricity-Shifting Policies,” January 2014. Dartmouth
Business and Environment Research Workshop: “Temporal and Spatial
Heterogeneity in Marginal Emissions: Implications for Electric Cars and
other Electricity-Shifting Policies,” April 2012. Dartmouth
Business and Environment Research Workshop: “Do Local Energy Prices and
Regulation Affect the Geographic Concentration of Employment? A Border
Pairs Approach,” September 2011. Yale
SOM Faculty Seminar: “Profiting from Regulation: An Event Study of the
European Carbon Market,” September 2009. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Firms’ Costs (and Benefits) of
Environmental Regulation: An Event Study of the EU Emission Trading
Scheme,” September
2009. Yale
Applied Microeconomics Summer Workshop: “Firms’ Costs (and Benefits) of
Environmental Regulation: An Event Study of the EU Emission Trading
Scheme,” June
2009. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Evaluating Emissions Trading Using a
Nearest (Polluting) Neighbor Estimator,” October
2008. Yale
Applied Microeconomics Summer Workshop: “Evaluating Emissions Trading
Using a Nearest (Polluting) Neighbor Estimator,” May
2008. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Averting Regulatory Enforcement:
Evidence from New Source Review,” October
2007. Yale
SOM Faculty Seminar: “Market Organization and Efficiency in Electricity
Markets,” September
2007. Yale
Applied Microeconomics Summer Workshop: “Market Organization and
Efficiency in Electricity Markets,” July
2007. Yale
FES Faculty Seminar: “Averting Enforcement: Strategic Response to the
Threat of Environmental Regulation,” April
2007. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Nearest (Polluting) Neighbor
Estimates: An Empirical Assessment of the RECLAIM Market,” April
2007. Yale
Industrial Organization Seminar: “Averting Enforcement: Strategic
Response to the Threat of Environmental Regulation,” (presented with
Nat Keohane) April
2007. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Averting Enforcement: Strategic
Response to the Threat of Environmental Regulation,” (presented with
Nat Keohane) November
2006. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “The Value of Scarce Water: Measuring
the Inefficiency of Municipal Regulations,” (presented with Sheila
Olmstead) April
2006. Yale
SOM Faculty Seminar: “The Value of Scarce Water: Measuring the
Inefficiency of Municipal Regulations,” (presented with Sheila
Olmstead) October 2005. Yale
Applied Microeconomics Seminar: “The Value of Scarce Water: Measuring
the Inefficiency of Municipal Regulations,” (presented with Sheila
Olmstead) September
2005. Yale
FES Faculty Seminar: “A Discrete-Continuous Choice Model of Climate
Change Impacts on Energy,” (presented with Rob Mendelsohn) September
2005. Yale
Applied Microeconomics Summer Workshop: “Are Brown Lawns the Right
Drought Policy? The Welfare Impacts of Non-Price Water Demand
Management,” (presented with Sheila Olmstead) July
2005. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Are Brown Lawns the Right Drought
Policy? The Welfare Impacts of Non-Price Water Demand Management,”
(presented with Sheila Olmstead) April
2005.
Yale
FES Faculty Seminar: “Reformulating Competition? Gasoline Content
Regulation, Competition, and the Wholesale Price of Gasoline,” December
2004. Yale
Applied Microeconomics Summer Workshop: “Reformulating Competition?
Gasoline Content Regulation, Competition, and the Wholesale Price of
Gasoline,” (presented with Justine Hastings) August 2004. Yale
SOM Faculty Seminar: “Market Structure and Competition: A Cross Market
Analysis of the U.S. Electricity Industry,” May 2004. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Is Real-Time Pricing Green?: The Environmental Impacts of
Electricity Demand Variance,” April 2004. Yale
Applied Microeconomics Summer Workshop: “Is Real-Time Pricing Green?: The Environmental Impacts of
Electricity Demand Variance,” August 2003. Yale
SOM Faculty Seminar: “Market Power and Vertical Integration: A Study of
Firm Behavior in Restructured Electricity Markets,” April 2003. Yale
Environmental Economics Seminar: “Is Real-Time Pricing Green?: The Environmental Impacts of
Electricity Demand Variance,” March 2003. Yale FES Faculty Seminar: “Pollution and Real-time Pricing,” November 2002. PRESENTATIONS
AT BERKELEY: University
of California-Berkeley: “The Impact of Retail Rate Deregulation on
Electricity Consumption in San Diego,” April 2002. University
of California-Berkeley: “Environmental Regulation in Oligopoly Markets:
A Study of Electricity Restructuring,” October 2001. University
of California-Berkeley: “Environmental Regulation in Oligopoly Markets:
A Study of Electricity Restructuring,” September 2001. |
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T. Mansur Personal home page. |