Regulation
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Publications by Dieter Helm
WORK IN PROGRESS: Credibility, commitment and regulation: ex ante price caps and ex post interventions
1st March 2010
Chapter in "The Natural Resources Trap: Private Investment without Public Commitment" MIT Press
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Publications by Dieter Helm
"Infrastructure investment, the cost of capital, and regulation: an assessment", Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 25:3, pp307-326.
2nd December 2009
New article from Dieter Helm
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News
German regulation threatens vital gas-infrastructure development
2nd November 2009
From The Petroleum Economist ...Dieter Helm, an Oxford University professor and adviser to the UK government on energy policy, criticises the EU for forcing through liberalisation before building the interconnections between national markets... Click here for the full article
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Presentations by Dieter Helm
Utility Regulation, the Regulatory Asset Base and the Cost of Capital
6th May 2009
SLIDES Competition Commission Spring Lecture 2009
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Publications by Dieter Helm
Utility regulation, the RAB and the cost of capital
6th May 2009
PAPER Competition Commission Spring Lecture 2009
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Presentations by Dieter Helm
Critical infrastructure and utility regulation: a joined-up approach
29th April 2009
Presentation given to Royal United Services Institute conference April 29th 2009
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Presentations by Dieter Helm
EU energy and climate change policy
28th January 2009
ESRI seminar January 28th 2009
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Publications by Dieter Helm
Georgia, Ukraine and energy security
28th January 2009
Centre for European Reform Bulletin Issue 64 http://www.cer.org.uk/articles/64_helm.html
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Presentations by Dieter Helm
The EU 20 20 20% renewables target
19th November 2008
Paper presented for the "hotchair session" at the Demos Europa Breakfast seminar on "Renewable energy – an alternative or supplement of coal?" Warsaw
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Publications by Dieter Helm
Climate-change policy: why has so little been achieved?
1st November 2008
While the scientific evidence for climate change grows, the policy responses have so far had little or no impact on the build-up of emissions. Current trends in emissions are adverse. The paper considers why the disconnect between science and policy exists and, in particular, why the Kyoto Protocol has achieved so little. Some contributing factors considered are: the focus on carbon production rather than consumption in the architecture of Kyoto; the flaws in the analysis presented in the Stern...