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Working paper
Carbon Pricing in New Zealand's Emissions Trading Scheme
In: USAEE Working Paper No. 16-255
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The Impact of Regulatory Change on EU Energy Utility Returns: The Three Liberalization Packages
In: Applied Economics, DOI/10.1080/00036846.2017.1346366, Forthcoming
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Stranded Assets in Palm Oil Production: A Case Study of Indonesia
In: Sustainable Finance Programme, SSEE, University of Oxford, Working Paper, July 2016
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The Impact of Liberalization and Environmental Policy On Financial Risk-Return Profiles of European Energy Utilities
In: USAEE Working Paper No. 14-183
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Working paper
An energy policy for ASEAN? Lessons from the EU experience on energy integration, security, and decarbonization
The European Union (EU) has redefined the energy sphere in Europe over the last three decades. Transnational policies targeting liberalization and integration, energy efficiency, renewables, carbon pricing, and energy security have led to major steps forward in terms of a more secure, integrated, and environmentally friendly energy supply. This paper explores, through the lenses of a paradigm shift and transition pathways, how the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) grouping might advance its own energy trilemma through greater energy cooperation. We provide evidence that ASEAN has lagged behind in terms of energy transition, representing considerable risks in multiple forms - most notably, political and physical climate risks from failing to meet the Paris Agreement targets and the risk of stranded assets if accelerated transition is achieved. However, accelerated transition could come in many forms. By drawing on the EU experience, we argue that an energy policy for ASEAN should explicitly pursue a dual transition pathway strategy to yield the best outcome in terms of the energy trilemma. First, an "ASEAN Supergrid" supported by a single energy market and by common carbon pricing would "green" urban and industrial demand. Second, "Distributed Smart Grids" would help reap the social and economic benefits of providing electricity to the rural/remotely located population that have hitherto not had access to electricity. This is a dual transnational and local approach that contrasts with energy transition defined at national level. This interconnected approach should yield security, environmental, and economic dividends.
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An Energy Policy for ASEAN? Lessons from the EU Experience on Energy Integration, Security, and Decarbonization
In: ADBI Working Paper 1217
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The Fate of European Coal-Fired Power Stations Planned in the Mid-2000s: Insights for Policymakers, Companies, and Investors Considering New Coal
In: Sustainable Finance Programme – Working Paper – August 2017
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