TY - JOUR A1 - Neumann, Anne A1 - von Hirschhausen, Christian T1 - Natural Gas: An Overview of a Lower-Carbon Transformation Fuel JF - Review of environmental economics and policy N2 - This article provides an overview of the natural gas industry, which we view as a bridge fuel toward a lower-carbon energy system in many countries and regions around the world. Based on a review of the literature, an econometric analysis of natural gas prices and contracts, and the authors' experience with the natural gas industry, this introductory article to the symposium on the Prospects for Natural Gas in a Lower-Carbon Context provides an overview of research on natural gas markets over the last decade and examines various features of the natural gas industry, including its technical structure, activities in the value-added chain, trade and market trends, short- and long-term price developments, and the geopolitical landscape. More specifically, we describe the natural gas sector and provide an overview of production, reserves, and consumption. We also examine the evolution of long-term contracts between producers and large-scale buyers of natural gas and present some recent empirical evidence. Finally, we discuss the changing geopolitics of natural gas, focusing in particular on the future roles of the United States as a potential natural gas exporter and Asia as the major importing region. (JEL: L11, L95, Q49). KW - L11 KW - L95 KW - Q49 KW - natural gas KW - low-carbon economy KW - global markets KW - prices KW - contracts Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/reep/reu022 SN - 1750-6816 SN - 1750-6824 VL - 9 IS - 1 SP - 64 EP - 84 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Neumann, Anne A1 - Rosellon, Juan A1 - Weigt, Hannes T1 - Removing Cross-Border Capacity Bottlenecks in the European Natural Gas Market-A Proposed Merchant-Regulatory Mechanism JF - Networks and spatial economics : a journal of infrastructure modeling and computation N2 - We propose a merchant-regulatory framework to promote investment in the European natural gas network infrastructure based on a price cap over two-part tariffs. As suggested by Vogelsang (J Regul Econ 20:141-165, 2001) and Hogan et al. (J Regul Econ 38:113-143, 2010), a profit maximizing network operator facing this regulatory constraint will intertemporally rebalance the variable and fixed part of its two-part tariff so as to expand the congested pipelines, and converge to the Ramsey-Boiteaux equilibrium. We confirm this with actual data from the European natural gas market by comparing the bi-level price-cap model with different reference cases. We analyze the performance of the regulatory approach under different market scenarios, and identify relevant aspects that need to be addressed if the approach were to be implemented. KW - Regulation KW - Natural gas network KW - Investment KW - Europe Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11067-014-9273-3 SN - 1566-113X SN - 1572-9427 VL - 15 IS - 1 SP - 149 EP - 181 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER -