Abstract
In the first part of this report, the why and how the strongly integrated gas industry structure allowed the domestic gas demand development are explained. An econometric model is used to examine other parameter effects. In the second part, consumer behaviour, behaviour laws, duality and elasticity concept are presented on a natural gas application basis. Various multi-energies models and specific gas distribution models taking into account countries variability (network, climate,...) are presented in the third part; translog and logit models are evaluated for Belgium, France, Italy, Germany and U.K. European common market effects on domestic natural gas demand are also examined.
Citation Formats
Cadoret, I.
Natural gas in the EEC domestic sector: industrial structure analysis and demand modelization.
France: N. p.,
1991.
Web.
Cadoret, I.
Natural gas in the EEC domestic sector: industrial structure analysis and demand modelization.
France.
Cadoret, I.
1991.
"Natural gas in the EEC domestic sector: industrial structure analysis and demand modelization."
France.
@misc{etde_10151245,
title = {Natural gas in the EEC domestic sector: industrial structure analysis and demand modelization}
author = {Cadoret, I}
abstractNote = {In the first part of this report, the why and how the strongly integrated gas industry structure allowed the domestic gas demand development are explained. An econometric model is used to examine other parameter effects. In the second part, consumer behaviour, behaviour laws, duality and elasticity concept are presented on a natural gas application basis. Various multi-energies models and specific gas distribution models taking into account countries variability (network, climate,...) are presented in the third part; translog and logit models are evaluated for Belgium, France, Italy, Germany and U.K. European common market effects on domestic natural gas demand are also examined.}
place = {France}
year = {1991}
month = {Jul}
}
title = {Natural gas in the EEC domestic sector: industrial structure analysis and demand modelization}
author = {Cadoret, I}
abstractNote = {In the first part of this report, the why and how the strongly integrated gas industry structure allowed the domestic gas demand development are explained. An econometric model is used to examine other parameter effects. In the second part, consumer behaviour, behaviour laws, duality and elasticity concept are presented on a natural gas application basis. Various multi-energies models and specific gas distribution models taking into account countries variability (network, climate,...) are presented in the third part; translog and logit models are evaluated for Belgium, France, Italy, Germany and U.K. European common market effects on domestic natural gas demand are also examined.}
place = {France}
year = {1991}
month = {Jul}
}