Do natural hazards in the Gulf Coast still matter for state-level natural gas prices in the US? : Evidence after the shale gas boom
Year of publication: |
2021
|
---|---|
Authors: | Huang, Kuan-Ming ; Etienne, Xiaoli Liao |
Published in: |
Energy economics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier, ISSN 0140-9883, ZDB-ID 795279-X. - Vol. 98.2021, p. 1-23
|
Subject: | Fixed-effects panel distributed lag model | Natural gas | Natural hazards | Price fluctuations | Property damage | Supply disruptions | Preis | Price | Erdgas | USA | United States | Schätzung | Estimation | Katastrophe | Disaster |
-
Turbulent times : uncovering the origins of US natural gas price fluctuations since deregulation
Wiggins, Seth, (2017)
-
Modelling dependence of extreme events in energy markets using tail copulas
Jäschke, Stefan, (2011)
-
How integrated are the local US markets for natural gas? : new evidence using rolling cointegration
Böker, Timo, (2015)
- More ...
-
Agricultural credit and the changing landscape of American agriculture
Hadrich, Joleen C., (2018)
-
Analyzing food price trends in the context of Engel’s law and the Prebisch-Singer hypothesis
Baffes, John, (2015)
-
$25 spring wheat was a bubble, right?
Etienne, Xiaoli Liao, (2015)
- More ...