The Electricity Journal
Volume 1 - 24
Current editor(s): R. Cohen From Elsevier Bibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 8, issue 10, 1995
- Recovering stranded costs in the tax code is inequitable pp. 2-2

- Glenn R. Schleede
- Restructuring-- the devil is in the details pp. 12-18

- Eric Hirst and Brendan Kirby
- Restructuring rates creates value and reduces stranded costs pp. 19-25

- Anna P. Della Valle and Miles O. Bidwell
- A wholesale pool spot market must be administered by the independent system operator: Avoiding the separation fallacy pp. 26-37

- William W. Hogan
- The energy efficiency challenge: Save the baby, throw out the bathwater pp. 38-47

- John H. Chamberlin and Patricia Herman
- Ranking electric generating technologies with external costs pp. 48-53

- A. Myrick Freeman and Robert D. Rowe
- The revolution continues pp. 54-56

- Henry R. Linden
- Unprecedented competition, fabulous technologies: A whole new ballgame for the energy industry pp. 57-60

- Douglas E. Olesen
- Technologies for the future global electrical power market--impact of deregulated markets pp. 60-64

- C. S. Tedmon and A. Roeder
- Electricity generation: Smaller is better pp. 65-73

- Thomas R. Casten
- ... But whither research pp. 74-76

- Robert W. Fri
Volume 8, issue 9, 1995
- A regulatory compact worthy of the name pp. 12-15

- Peter Bradford
- The economics of stranded investment--a two-way street pp. 16-23

- Reed Cearley and Lance McKinzie
- Been there, done that: Lessons learned from a report on stranded investment pp. 24-31

- Ronald J. Matlock
- A California restructuring settlement: Will all the parties agree? pp. 32-37

- Eric C. Woychik
- The next Gordian Knot for state regulators and electric utilities: The unbundling of retail services pp. 38-49

- Kenneth W. Costello
- Modeling natural gas prices as a random walk: The advantages for generation planning pp. 61-67

- Frank A. Felder
- Alternative dispute resolution in electricity: Just do it! pp. 68-75

- John T. Coughlin
Volume 8, issue 8, 1995
- Nuclear writedowns pp. 2-2

- Steve Bohlman
- Electric utility mergers and acquisitions seen in a larger perspective pp. 11-19

- Douglas W. Hawes
- Affiliate transactions and electric industry restructuring pp. 20-27

- Belton T. Zeigler
- Pricing ancillary electric power services pp. 28-36

- Laurence D. Kirsch and Harry Singh
- The effects of state regulation on the use of DSM resources by electric utilities pp. 37-43

- Martin Schweitzer and Timothy R. Young
- Judging past policies: Where are we in the electricity policy debate? pp. 44-53

- John O. Sillin
- Critical links: The role of electric utilities in information infrastructure pp. 54-63

- Steven R. Rivkin
- Performance-based ratemaking: Opportunities and risks in a competitive electricity industry pp. 64-73

- Tim Woolf and Julie Michals
- Maine's electric revenue adjustment mechanism: Why it Fizzled pp. 74-83

- Leslie Hudson, Stephanie Seguino and Ralph E. Townsend
- Recover stranded costs in the tax code pp. CO3-CO3

- Craig G. Goodman
Volume 8, issue 7, 1995
- Son of nodal pricing pp. 2-13

- James G. Kritikson
- Results-driven change: Time to rewire reengineering pp. 14-21

- Elaine M. Mandrish and Robert H. Schaffer
- Rethinking the reengineering metaphor pp. 22-30

- Carol Gorski, John Ord and Kenis Dunne
- Preparing for upheaval: Why America's electric utilities must reengineer pp. 31-37

- Michael Weiner, Jeffrey Walker and Huard Smith
- Realizing value from acquisitions pp. 38-43

- Vittorio Pareto and James E. Huston
- Protecting your utility's most valuable assets: Key industrial and commercial relationships--An outsider's view pp. 44-51

- Joseph P. Sperry
- FERC's Connecticut light & power order overstates PURPA's preemptive effect pp. 52-55

- Adam Wenner
- Service, shmervice: The differentiation of delivered electric power qualities pp. 56-61

- Richard P. Felak
- Paved with good intentions: Reflections on FERC's decisions reversing state power procurement processes pp. 62-68

- David Moskovitz and Peter Bradford
- Electric Utility Rates and the Evaluation of Management Performance pp. 69-77

- Ernst R. Berndt, Michael J. Doane and Roy J. Epstein
Volume 8, issue 6, 1995
- BRPU Scenario 'Fantastic' pp. 2-2

- Frank De Rose
- The future of the U.S. electric utility industry pp. 16-25

- Vinod K. Dar
- Electricity Hubs and Market centers: A new business tool for electric utilities? pp. 26-35

- Marc A. Vallen and Leslie Struble Sharp
- Generation as a business-- facts, fumbles, fictions and the future pp. 36-41

- Vikram S. Budhraja
- 'Grand bargain' or 'Grand larceny'? pp. 42-49

- Robert C. McDiarmid
- Technology and Industry structure pp. 50-62

- Kurt E. Yeager
- What Model for Restructing? The Debate in the Competitive Power Market Working Group pp. 63-73

- Charles G. Stalon and Eric C. Woychik
- Rights to Capacity: Transitional Protection for Existing Utility Customers pp. 74-83

- Roger L. Conkling
Volume 8, issue 5, 1995
- Spellcheck this, shrub wet! pp. 2-2

- Mark Thornsjo
- Morals vs. models pp. 2-2

- Nancy Rader
- Detroit Edison to flat-earthers: Use determines Jurisdiction pp. 3-3

- Joseph L. Welch
- Beyond project finance pp. 22-30

- Anthony A. Churchill
- Cross-border utility investments: Translating investment risk into global advantage pp. 31-37

- Alan M. Cody and Edward E. Graham
- Restructing the Philippine electric power industry pp. 38-44

- R. Stanley Bowden and Michael Ellis
- Congress's nuclear waste 'contract with America' -- Where do we go from here? pp. 45-55

- Ronald C. Callen
- U.S.nuclear decommission trust planning: Romancing a millstone? pp. 56-61

- John S. Rohrbach
- Is there a future for nuclear power in America? pp. 62-71

- Thomas Prugh, Mark Gielecki and James G. Hewlett
- The value of electric utility equities: Erosion of the bond pp. 72-84

- James M. Piepmeier
- It's the customer, stupid'--Not 'the stupid customer pp. 85-85

- Kennedy P. Maize
Volume 8, issue 4, 1995
- LOLP and accreditation clarified pp. 2-2

- Bryan D. Morlock
- Franchise competition in the electric utility industry pp. 14-27

- Clinton A. Vince and J. Cathy Fogel
- The franchise bottleneck pp. 28-38

- James F. Fairman
- Seeing the forest from the trees: Emergence of the competitive franchise pp. 39-49

- Scott Ridley
- Estimating the impacts of restrictions on utility participation in the SO2 allowance market pp. 50-54

- James J. Winebrake, Mark A. Bernstein and Alex E. Farrell
- Addressing the public's goals for environmental regulation when communicating acid rain allowance trades pp. 55-63

- Alan P. Loeb
- Twelve common myths of allowance trading: Improving the level of discussion pp. 64-69

- Kenneth Rose
- How much are customers willing to pay for improvements in health and environmental quality? pp. 70-77

- Lisa L. Wood, Anne E. Kenyon, William H. Desvousges and Lyn K. Morander
- Comparable transmission service--The new standard pp. 78-84

- Charles A. Falcone
Volume 8, issue 3, 1995
- No 'one size fits all' pp. 2-3

- Neil H. Talbot
- Are externalities extraneous under cap and offset requirements? pp. 3-3

- Erik F. Haites
- Designing an auction for QF generation resources in California: What went wrong? pp. 14-23

- Paul R. Gribik
- Nodal prices and transmission rights: A critical appraisal pp. 24-35

- Shmuel S. Oren, Pablo Spiller, Pravin Varaiya and Felix Wu
- A market-based approach for analysis of utility decisions pp. 36-42

- Edward C. Bodmer and Richard H. Waldman
- Valuing options for electric power resources pp. 43-49

- Jamss C. Cater
- Market-based IRP: It's easy!!! pp. 50-67

- Shimon Awerbuch
- 'Comparability' requires ending regulatory penalties on intermittent renewable power pp. 68-69

- Jeffrey D. Watkiss
- The competitive generation market has been assumed, not proven pp. 70-73

- Steven M. Lewis and Janet Gail Besser
- The future of IRP and other public goods in a market-driven world pp. 74-84

- Eric Hirst, Bruce Tonn and Douglas Bauer
- Beware the 2nd price auction pp. 86-87

- Paul R. Gribik
- IRP and DSM meet spellcheck pp. 88-89

- Rick Morgan
Volume 8, issue 2, 1995
- The future of renewable energy industries pp. 12-31

- Murray Silverman and Susan Worthman
- Catching a steady breeze: Putting wind power to work on electric utility systems pp. 32-41

- Michael C. Brower and Michael W. Tennis
- You've got to pay to play: Photovoltaics and transaction costs pp. 42-49

- David Berry
- Moving photovoltaics from the lab to utility application pp. 50-55

- Brian K. Farmer
- Integrated resource planning with renewable resources pp. 56-66

- Douglas M. Logan, Chris A. Neil, Alan S. Taylor and Peter Lilienthal
- A modest proposal for shaping a reasonable new world pp. 67-71

- Barbara James
- Honey, I shrunk the franchise! pp. 72-77

- Ashley C. Brown
Volume 8, issue 1, 1995
- Equalizing burdens pp. 2-3

- Peter A. Isaacson
- Small customers don't want to play "Cajun" pp. 2-2

- Nancy Brockway
- Keep regulating speech pp. 3-3

- Philip Raphals
- How likely is long-run competition in electricity generation? Warning sign pp. 12-20

- David W. Penn
- A timid proposal: Follow the internet, not Poolco pp. 21-27

- Leonard S. Hyman
- Electricity matters: A new incentives approach for a changing electric industry pp. 28-40

- Wayne P. Olson and Kenneth W. Costello
- Competitive pricing of energy services in New York State: Current trends and issues pp. 41-53

- Tom U. U. Okure
- The customer bill as an index of utility performance pp. 54-59

- Sanford Berg
- Progress of a policy experiment: Climate challenge interim report card pp. 60-70

- Sheryl Sturges and Jeffrey Hewitt
- Are externalities extraneous under emission cap and offset requirements? pp. 71-79

- Ajay K. Sanghi and Anthony L. Joseph
- On the road to NOx emissions trading pp. 80-84

- Susan M. Tikalsky, Joseph M. Kramer and Robert Patrick
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