There have been several comprehensive studies of energy policy in the last few years, for example, Shurr (1979), Federal Energy Administration (1976), ERDA (1976), and the Ford Foundation (Landsberg, 1978). Unlike these studies of energy policies, this effort is not prescriptive. Rather, it measures the effects of a large set of policies on energy markets to provide an understanding of how government programs reinforce or offset one another.
Energy Information Administration (1980a) Energy Programs, Energy Markets-Overview. DOE/EIA-0201/16, July.
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Energy Information Administration (1980b) Energy Programs, Energy Markets-Technical Papers. DOE/E IA-0201/17, July.
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Energy Research and Development Administration (1976). A National Plan for Energy Research, Development, and Demonstration: Creating Energy Choices for the Future, 1976. Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, ERDA 76-1.
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Federal Energy Administration (1976). National Energy Outlook. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
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HoganWilliamSweeneyJamesWagnerMichael (1978). “Energy Policy Models in the National Energy Outlook.” In TIMS Studies in the Management Sciences, Vol. 10. Amsterdam: North-Holland.
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LandsbergHans H. (1978). Energy: The Next Twenty Years. Report by a Study Group sponsored by the Ford Foundation and Administered by Resources for the Future. Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger.
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MurphyFredericSandersReginaldShawSusanThrasherRichard (1981). “Modeling Natural Gas Regulatory Proposals Using the Project Independence Evaluation System.” Operations Research. (November-December).
8.
ShurrSam H. (1979). Energy in America's Future: The Choices Before Vs. Baltimore: Resources for the Future and Johns Hopkins University Press.