环境与自然资源经济学教师手册M08_TIET1380_08_IM_C.pdf
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1、Chapter 8 Energy:The Transition from Depletable to Renewable Resources Chapter 8 is the first chapter in the text to deal with a specific resource question.Primary considerations are the nonrenewable energy sources of oil and natural gas.These two energy sources are depletable and non-recyclable,yet
2、 supply the majority of all energy consumed in the United States.This chapter examines some of the issues associated with the efficient allocation of energy resources and shows how economic analysis can be used in policy making.This is a complex subject and the chapter quickly covers a large amount
3、material and concepts.Given current interest in oil prices and cartel activities as well as in conservation,electricity production,national security and climate considerations and the transition to renewable energy sources,this chapter could be subdivided into two or more lectures.Some basic microec
4、onomic concepts are applied to these topics such as the effect of price controls on natural gas markets,oligopolistic behavior of cartels such as OPEC and the effects of price elasticity of demand for energy products.These will likely be new concepts for students.Applied to specific cases,however,th
5、ey should be relatively intuitive.1.Discuss our dependence on depletable,non-recyclable energy resources and review the efficient extraction path of these resources.2.Discuss whether or not historical allocations have been efficient.3.Present the history of natural gas price regulation.4.Illustrate
6、the effect of price ceilings on the market for natural gas,utilizing the concepts of scarcity rent and marginal user cost.5.Show conceptually and graphically how price controls can hurt consumers and producers in the long run.6.Teach the concept of price elasticity of demand.7.Show how a monopolist
7、can raise prices by restricting output.8.Discuss how OPEC colludes to gain market power and acts as a monopolist.9.Show how inelasticity of demand for oil leads to large gains for the cartel.10.Teach the concept of income elasticity of demand and its potential effect on cartel pricing power.Chapter
8、8 Energy:The Transition from Depletable to Renewable Resources 41 11.Show how the competitive fringe can impact prices.12.Discuss the threats to the stability of cartels,including member incentives to cheat on output agreements.13.Discuss national security and climate concerns,introducing concepts s
9、uch as the vulnerability premium,domestic versus foreign supply,options for reducing dependence on imports,and how emission of carbon generates an externality to the energy user.14.Discuss the environmental impacts of using transition fuels such as coal and uranium and unconventional oil sources.15.
10、Give a brief history of nuclear power and regulation.16.Discuss utility pricing,including average cost pricing.17.Introduce pricing schemes for conservation such as peak load pricing.18.Discuss the current alternatives for the transition to renewable energies I.Natural Gas:Price Controls This sectio
11、n gives a history of natural gas regulation and discusses the effects of price controls on the natural gas market.A.A natural gas shortage of 2 trillion cubic feet,or 10 percent of the marketed production,occurred in 19741975.B.After the invention of the automobile,rising demands for gasoline stimul
12、ated searches for new sources of crude oil which also led to discoveries of large quantities of natural gas.Natural gas then began replacing manufactured gas as an energy source.C.In 1938 the Natural Gas Act was passed.With this Act,the Federal Power Commission(FPC)became a federal regulatory agency
13、 charged with maintaining“just”prices.Price controls were imposed on natural gas shipped across state lines.D.In Phillips Petroleum Co.v.Wisconsin(1954),the Supreme Court forced the FPC to extend its price control regulations to the producers.E.Price ceilings were imposed which prevented prices from
14、 reaching their normal levels.The effects of price ceilings on a market can be illustrated graphically.F.Price ceilings,by holding prices at an artificially low level,led to overconsumption of natural gas,causing shortages.Over time,a price ceiling would cause more of the resource to be used in earl
15、ier years.G.On the supply side,producers who expect price ceilings to be lifted have incentives to slow production and wait for higher prices,thus exacerbating existing shortages.H.Since the price controls on natural gas were imposed only on gas shipped across state lines,gas produced and sold withi
16、n a given state received a higher price than gas sold in other states.Thus,the share of gas sold on the interstate market fell over time.This caused shortages to be concentrated in states dependent on interstate shipments of natural gas.Thus,the price control system caused more damage than would hav
17、e happened otherwise.42 Tietenberg/Lewis Environmental and Natural Resource Economics,Eighth Edition I.The time of transition is earlier under price controls and is abrupt with a sudden jump in price.A discontinuity in the transition places a burden on consumers.J.Artificially low prices of natural
18、gas created a bias toward substitutes that could be blended with natural gas and away from substitutes that could not.This created a system of average cost pricing.This inefficient policy was pursued based on rent-seeking behavior.K.These political incentives can be explained with a simple graph ill
19、ustrating the changes in producer-and consumer-surplus arising from price controls.A supply and demand graph with producer and consumer surpluses highlighted helps to illustrate this point.L.Price ceilings reduce the marginal user cost of natural gas since higher future prices are no longer possible
20、.A lower marginal user cost causes the producers perceived supply curve to be lower.Current consumers are better off.Future consumers are worse off.Producers will stop producing when the marginal extraction cost reaches the price control.Consumers would be willing to pay and producers would sell for
21、 higher prices,but the price ceiling will keep those resources in the ground.M.Congress may impose this type of policy in order to transfer revenue to current consumers.However,in actuality,this is a transfer from future consumers to current consumers.Scarcity rents are important for efficient alloc
22、ations over time.N.Over the long run,price controls hurt consumers.Price controls are politically attractive,however,since current consumers mean current votes.O.The Natural Gas Policy Act was passed on November 9,1978.Natural gas prices began to be decontrolled in the early 1980s,causing rapid pric
23、e rises.By 1993,no sources of natural gas were subject to price controls.P.The demand for natural gas has been rising,and as such prices have also been rising.Q.Imports have also risen,much in the form of Liquefied Natural Gas(LNG).LNG facilities are controversial due to the risks of fires and secur
24、ity risks.II.Oil:The Cartel Problem Price controls are not the only source of inefficiencies in energy resource allocations.Collusion in oil markets has also led to inefficiencies.This section discusses the effects of the oil cartel,OPEC,on oil markets.The concepts of price elasticity of demand,inco
25、me elasticity of demand,and incentives to cheat on agreements are introduced here.A.A monopolist,by restricting supply,can extract more scarcity rent from a depletable resource.Restricted supply results in higher prices.Net benefits to society are reduced.The transition to a substitute will occur la
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