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Energy, the State, and the Market Dieter Helm (New College, Oxford)

Energy, the State, and the Market By Dieter Helm (New College, Oxford)

Energy, the State, and the Market by Dieter Helm (New College, Oxford)


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Summary

Blends economic analysis with political and historical narrative. This work traces the way in which political pressures from the proponents of both nationalization and privatization, as well as environmentalists, have affected the development of an industry which forms a significant part of the national economy.

Energy, the State, and the Market Summary

Energy, the State, and the Market: British Energy Policy since 1979 by Dieter Helm (New College, Oxford)

The transformation of Britain's energy policy in the last two decades has been more radical than any such change in developed economies. Since 1979 the great state energy monopolies created after the Second World War have been privatised and made subject to competition. Images of Arthur Scargill and the miners' strike of the 1980s remain vivid, but what effect has the new market philosophy had on Britain's energy industries? Since 1979 the National Coal Board, British Gas, and the Central Electricity Generating Board have all been broken up. Energy trading, electricity pools, auctions, and futures markets first developed, but they failed to solve the old energy policy problems of security of supply and network integrity, and the new ones of the environment and reliance on gas. The government introduced a new regulatory regime as a temporary necessity but regulation did not wither away, rather it grew to be more pervasive. Changing the ownership of the industries did not reduce the government's involvement, it simply changed its form. The 1980s and 1990s were years of energy surpluses and low fossil-fuel prices. There was little need to invest, and much of the investment in the so-called dash for gas was artificially stimulated. The new owners sweated the assets, and engaged in major financial engineering. Takeovers consolidated the industry into a smaller number of dominant firms. As investment priorities became more urgent, with the environmental pressures of climate change and the gradual switch to imported gas, the market philosophy was found wanting. Energy policy could not rely solely on the market. And it is the government which finds itself responsible for resolving the core issues of energy policy. Helm's book tells this story. It is a major study of the new market approach to energy policy in Britain since 1979. It describes the miners' strike, the privatisations of the gas, electricity, nuclear generation, and coal industries, and looks at events such as the dash for gas, regulatory failures in setting monopoly prices, and the takeovers and the consolidations of the late 1990s. Helm sets out the achievements of the new market philosophy, but also analyses why it has ultimately failed to turn energy industries into normal commodity businesses. The revised paperback edition includes a new chapter on the White Paper on a low-carbon economy and updated discussions on nuclear power, to incorporate the 2003 Nuclear White Paper, price reviews, and emissions trading.

About Dieter Helm (New College, Oxford)

Dieter Helm is Official Fellow in Economics at New College, Oxford. He has been a member of the Department of Trade and Industry's Energy Advisory Panel since 1993 and is also Chairman of the Academic Panel of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. He is a director of Oxford Economic Research Associates Ltd (OXERA) and has advised governments, regulators, and major companies in the UK and internationally.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction ; 2. The Inheritance: State Ownership, Monopoly, and Planning ; 3. First Steps Towards the Market Philosophy ; 4. Thatcher and Scargill: Getting Off the Labour Standard ; 5. The Nuclear Option in the 1980s: Security of Supply and National Energy Independence ; 6. Missed Opportunity: British Gas Privatization ; 7. Electricity Privatization ; 8. The Transition to Competition in the Electricity Industry ; 9. Preparing for the End of British Coal: Privatization and Decline ; 10. Nuclear Privatization and the End of the Nuclear Dream ; 11. Regulatory Failure and Financial Engineering: The RECs' First Review ; 12. Takeover Mania and Capital Market Competition ; 13. The Break-Up of British Gas ; 14. Domestic Competition in Gas and Electricity ; 15. Regulatory Reform and New Labour ; 16. Energy Sources, Diversity, and Long-Term Security of Supply ; 17. NETA and the Consolidation of Generation ; 18. Price Reviews Again: Asset-Sweating or Investment? ; 19. The Environment Moves Centre Stage ; 20. The European Dimension ; 21. Energy Policy Revisited ; 22. A Low-carbon Economy ; 23. Reinventing Energy Policy

Additional information

NLS9780199270743
9780199270743
0199270740
Energy, the State, and the Market: British Energy Policy since 1979 by Dieter Helm (New College, Oxford)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press
2004-02-19
492
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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