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Title: Regulation and competition: an analysis of natural gas policy reforms

Thesis/Dissertation ·
OSTI ID:5365659

In 1985 the federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued Order 436, a set of reforms intended to extend competition by opening transportation to all shippers and allowing market entry by competing pipelines. This thesis assesses the reforms' efficiency and equity. Efficient pricing and investment rules are derived and applied to the new policy. The reforms are probably an improvement, but the attempt to ensure parity with traditional sales service may hamstring potential gains, and rate design to stimulate competition may forgo benefits of multi-part tariffs and discourage efficient risk-sharing and investment. The analysis also addresses problems of competition in a regulated utility's traditional market. Even if wellhead markets are competitive, it may prove difficult to separate the commodity from pipeline market power. An industry simulation model is constructed from estimates of demand and supply, representing thirteen major interstate pipelines. The simulation is over 1985-90 for nine combinations of trading arrangements, regulation of commodity prices, and distortions from rigid purchase contracts. Deregulation policies risk large efficiency losses if contractual constraints distort prices. However, if new gas prices are flexible, rigidity in high-cost contracts and partial deregulation of old gas yield little efficiency loss relative to fully-flexible scenarios.

Research Organization:
Wisconsin Univ., Madison (USA)
OSTI ID:
5365659
Resource Relation:
Other Information: Thesis (Ph. D.)
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English