- Energy Modeling Forum
The Energy Modeling Forum (EMF) is a structured forum for discussing important issue in energy and the environment. The EMF was established in 1976 at
Stanford University . The EMF works through a series of ad hoc working groups, each focussing on a particular corporate or policy decision. The EMF provides a non-partisan platform that ensures objective consideration of opposing views.In recent years, the EMF has made considerable contributions to the economics of
climate change , as witnessed in the reports of theIntergovernmental Panel on Climate Change , and tointegrated assessment modelling .The full list of EMF studies is
EMF01: Energy and the economy
EMF02: Coal in transition: 1980-2000
EMF03: Electric load forecasting: Probing the issue with models
EMF04: Aggregate elasticity of energy demand
EMF05: US oil and gas supply
EMF06: World oil
EMF07: Macroeconomic impacts of energy shocks
EMF08: Industrial energy demand, conservation, and interfuel substitution
EMF09: North American natural gas markets
EMF10: Electricity markets and planning
EMF11: International oil supplies and demands
EMF12: Controlling global carbon emissions: Costs and policy options
EMF13: Markets for energy efficiency
EMF14: Integrated assessment of climate change
EMF15: A competitive electricity industry
EMF16: The costs of the Kyoto Protocol
EMF17: Markets for electricity: Economics and technology
EMF18: Prices and emissions in restructured electricity markets
EMF19: Climate change: Technology strategies and international trade
EMF20: Natural gas, fuel diversity, and North American energy markets
EMF21: Multi-gas mitigation and climate change
EMF22: Climate policy scenarios for stabilization and in transition
EMF23: World natural gas markets and trade
EMF25: Energy demand and efficiency in a growing economyJohn Weyant is the current director of the EMF.External links
* [http://www.stanford.edu/group/EMF/ Home page]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.