More in Energy (1715)

| In which King Coal makes a comeback, President Putin loses his patience with Gazprom, Prime Minister Cameron contradicts himself and Executi...

| It is taking longer than expected for renewable energy in the Middle East and North Africa to develop, as political and social unrest make i...

| The 'relevant market' for gas spot sales in Europe is currently being determined by most regulators along national boundaries. The widely ac...

| The struggle for European energy market integration is an uphill one - certainly when you want to connect North Africa to Europe as well. He...

| The UK once set the trend for the rest of Europe with the liberalisation of its energy market. Now, with a series of new legislative and pol...

| "Where politics and markets meet" is - since the beginning of this year - the slogan of European Energy Review - and it was never as appropr...

| Dieter Helm's new book "The Carbon Crunch" reads a bit like a detective novel. It is about "who killed climate policy". And how we can reviv...

| With the growth of bioenergy across the globe, the debate over its relevance and impact has intensified, pitting the industry and bioenergy'...

| No two countries seem to be further apart in their energy policies than Germany and Poland. Whereas Germany is pursuing a hugely ambitious E...

| In this paper we review the necessity of government production subsidies for renewable energy on the basis on the infant industry argument,...