Generated by GPT-5-mini| The Energy Journal | |
|---|---|
| Title | The Energy Journal |
| Discipline | Energy economics |
| Abbreviation | EJ |
| Publisher | International Association for Energy Economics |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
| History | 1980–present |
| Issn | 0195-6574 |
The Energy Journal The Energy Journal is a peer-reviewed quarterly periodical concentrating on energy-related economic analysis, policy evaluation, and market design. It publishes research by academics, analysts, and practitioners affiliated with institutions such as Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Chicago, and Stanford University. The journal serves as a nexus for debates involving stakeholders from World Bank, International Monetary Fund, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and regional entities like European Commission.
The Energy Journal positions itself at the intersection of applied econometrics and sectoral policy studies, featuring articles that link modeling techniques used at National Bureau of Economic Research, Brookings Institution, Resources for the Future, and RAND Corporation to regulatory frameworks advocated by U.S. Department of Energy, International Energy Agency, and United Nations Development Programme. Contributors often come from departments such as London School of Economics, Yale University, Princeton University, and Columbia University and collaborate with corporations like ExxonMobil, Shell plc, and BP on empirical datasets. The publication routinely cites energy events including the 1973 oil crisis, Chernobyl disaster, Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, and policy milestones like the Kyoto Protocol.
Founded in 1980 under the auspices of the International Association for Energy Economics, the journal emerged during debates sparked by the aftermath of the 1979 energy crisis and scholarly responses from centers at University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, and Carnegie Mellon University. Early editors recruited authors connected to think tanks such as Heritage Foundation and Center for Strategic and International Studies, and to academic programs at University of California, Berkeley and Texas A&M University. Over decades the journal adapted to market liberalization trends exemplified by reforms in United Kingdom and Australia, the rise of commodity exchanges like the New York Mercantile Exchange, and the diffusion of modeling platforms from International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis.
The journal covers microeconomic and macroeconomic analyses of oil, gas, coal, and electricity markets; valuation studies tied to environmental economics instruments such as those debated after the Paris Agreement; and technology assessments involving institutions like National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and Argonne National Laboratory. Common themes include price formation observed in regional markets like those monitored by Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, asset valuation relevant to firms such as Tesla, Inc. and General Electric, and policy evaluations linked to legislation like emissions trading schemes initiated in European Union member states. Methodological pieces often reference statistical work from American Economic Association meetings and modeling advances associated with Computable General Equilibrium analyses.
Published quarterly by the International Association for Energy Economics, the editorial board historically comprises scholars from Duke University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Michigan, Pennsylvania State University, and international centers including Tsinghua University and National University of Singapore. Peer review is double-blind with oversight by editors who have held positions at organizations such as International Monetary Fund and World Bank. Special issues are guest-edited by researchers affiliated with institutes like Institute of Energy Economics, Japan, Centre for European Policy Studies, and Asia Development Bank.
The journal is indexed in major services including EBSCOhost, Scopus, Web of Science, and RePEc. It is discoverable through platforms managed by ProQuest, JSTOR (select backfiles), and library catalogs at institutions such as British Library and Library of Congress. Citation metrics are tracked in databases maintained by Clarivate and by analytics produced for panels at conferences like those of the International Energy Agency and World Energy Council.
The Energy Journal is cited in policy reports from European Commission directorates, briefings at United States Congress hearings, and white papers by International Renewable Energy Agency. Its influence is evident in academic syllabi at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Imperial College London, and ETH Zurich, and in applied modeling work used by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley commodity analysts. Reviews in outlets such as Nature Energy and Energy Policy have highlighted its role shaping debates around carbon pricing, market liberalization, and technology adoption.
Noteworthy contributions include seminal modeling papers that informed deliberations during negotiations of the Kyoto Protocol and analyses cited in panels convened by United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Special issues have focused on topics coordinated with conferences at International Association for Energy Economics meetings, guest editors from National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and cross-disciplinary symposia involving Stanford University and University of California, Berkeley. The journal has published influential case studies on events such as the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and policy assessments following the European Union Emissions Trading System implementation.
Category:Energy economics journals