J. Steinbuks and V. Foster
When do firms generate? Evidence on in-house electricity supply in Africa
Energy Economics (article in press)
2009 | Available at Science Direct
J. Steinbuks and V. Foster
When do firms generate? Evidence on in-house electricity supply in Africa
Energy Economics (article in press)
2009 | Available at Science Direct
Jevgenijs Steinbuks Financial constraints and firms’ investment: results of a natural experiment measuring firm response to power interruption EPRG 0823 Non-Technical Summary | PDF Abstract: This study uses the observed differences between public system failures and private investment as a natural experiment to reveal the effect of financing constraints on firms’ ability to substitute specifically… Continue Reading
Jevgenijs Steinbuks, Andreia Meshreky, and Karsten Neuhoff The Effect of Energy Prices on Operation and Investment in OECD Countries: Evidence from the Vintage Capital Model EPRG 0922 Non-Technical Summary | PDF Abstract: This paper analyzes the effect of energy prices on energy efficiency, separately accounting for operational and investment choices in different sectors. For this… Continue Reading
Jevgenijs Steinbuks Interfuel Substitution and Energy Use in the UK Manufacturing Sector EPRG 1015 | Non-Technical Summary | PDF Abstract: This paper investigates interfuel substitution in the UK manufacturing sector. Econometric models of interfuel substitution are applied to energy inputs aggregated by their energy use, and separately for thermal heating processes, where interfuel substitution is… Continue Reading
Jevgenijs Steinbuks and Karsten Neuhoff Operational and Investment Response to Energy Prices in the OECD Manufacturing Sector EPRG 1006 | Non-Technical Summary | PDF Abstract: This paper estimates the vintage capital model of energy demand and examines operational and investment responses to energy prices at disaggregate level using data from five OECD manufacturing industries. Applying… Continue Reading
Luis Orea and Jevgenijs Steinbuks Estimating Market Power in Homogeneous Product Markets Using a Composed Error Model: Application to the California Electricity Market Continue Reading