Research at FSI Stanford
Geopolitics of Gas
PESD has investigated the geopolitical consequences of the world's increasing dependence on natural gas. Current studies are focusing on two key new gas markets--China and India, and modelling potential demand.
View the main page »
View this project's publications as a single, printable list »
Publications
Records 1-11 of 21Sort by Year | Title
- The Future of Natural Gas in India: A Study of Major Consuming Sectors
Mike Jackson
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development Working Paper #65 (2007)
- The Future of Natural Gas vs. Coal Consumption in Beijing, Guangdong and Shanghai: An assessment utilizing MARKAL
BinBin Jiang
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development Working Paper #62 (2007)
- India's expanding natural gas markets
David G. Victor
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development (2007)
Institutions and Gas Market Security
Mark H. Hayes
Stanford (2007)
Monthly Gas Trade in the Atlantic Basin circa 2015
Mark H. Hayes
Stanford (2007)
Flexible LNG Supply and Gas Market Integration: A Simulation Approach for Valuing the Market Arbitrage Option
Mark H. Hayes
Stanford (2007)
Natural Gas and Geopolitics: From 1970 to 2040
David G. Victor, Amy M. Jaffe, Mark H. Hayes
Cambridge University Press (2006)

- Natural Gas Sector Reform in India: Case Study of a Hybrid Market Design
Mike Jackson
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development Working Paper #43 (2005)
Political and Economic Influences on the Future World Market for Natural Gas
Kenneth B. Medlock, Peter Hartley
(2005)
- Geopolitics of Natural Gas Project Summary: Insights to 2040
Amy Jaffe, Mark H. Hayes, David G. Victor
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development Working Paper #36 (2005)
- Politics, Markets, and the Shift to Gas: Insights from Seven Historical Case Studies
Mark H. Hayes, David G. Victor
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development Working Paper #35 (2005)
