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James L.
Sweeney
Director, Precourt Institute for Energy Efficiency
Professor, Management Science and Engineering
Office: Terman 459 | Phone: 650-723-2847 | Fax: 650-723-1304
Email: jim.sweeney @ stanford.edu |
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Research Interests
Fields of Specialization:
Energy, Natural Resource, and Environment: Analysis,
Economics, and Policy; Applied Economics
Interests:
Professor James L. Sweeney is Director of the Precourt Institute for Energy
Efficiency, Professor of Management Science and Engineering, an affiliated faculty member of the Department
of Economics, and a Senior Fellow of the Stanford Institute for
Economic Policy Research. Until September 1999, he served as chairman
of the Stanford Department of Engineering-Economic Systems and Operations
Research.
He has focused his professional activities on
the application of economics methods and mathematical modeling,
particularly to natural resource issues, energy economics, environmental
economics, competitive analysis, and policy analysis. He has conducted
theoretical research on depletable and renewable resource use, environmental
economics, gasoline market dynamics, energy tariff policy, and housing
market dynamics. He has conducted empirical research on energy demand,
electricity demand and financial forecasting, and geothermal energy
market behavior. Along with Alan Kneese, he was editor of the three
volume Handbook of Natural Resource and Energy Economics, part
of the North Holland Handbooks in Economics series.
At Stanford he has served as the Director of
the Energy Modeling Forum for seven years, the Chairman of the Institute
for Energy Studies, and the Director of the Center for Economic
Policy Research (now named the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy
Research). He has served as coeditor of the Journal Resource
and Energy Economics and serve on the editorial board of The
Energy Journal. He was a founding member of the International
Association for Energy Economics and has served as its vicepresident
for publications. He has been a member of several committees of
the National Research Council (the operating branch of the National
Academy of Science and the National Academy of Engineering) and
until recently served on the Board on Energy and Environmental System.
He is a Fellow of the California Council on Science and Technology.
He currently is a member of the review panel for the Public Interest
Energy Research Program run by the state of California.
In the early 1970's he served as Director of
the Office of Energy Systems Modeling and Forecasting of the U.S.
Federal Energy Administration. In that role he was responsible for
the development and the use of the energy supply and demand models
used by the U.S. Federal government for its energy policy analysis
and for its forecasting of energy supply and demand. He personally
developed the structural/econometric model of gasoline demand used
by that agency.
He periodically serves as a consultant or advisor
to Exxon Corporation, ARCO, the American Petroleum Institute, Charles
River Associates, Cornerstone Research, the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, and the U.S. Department of Energy. He has served as an expert
witness in a number of energy litigations in natural gas, oil, and
electricity industries in the United States and in New Zealand.
He holds a B.S. degree from MIT in Electrical
Engineering and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in EngineeringEconomic
Systems. His articles have appeared in numerous books and journals,
including Econometrica, Journal of Economic Theory, Resources
and Energy, Management Science, Journal of Urban Economics, and
The Energy Journal. |