Senior research associate (Resources for the Future), Lecturer (University of Michigan Ford School of Public Policy), University of Michigan
Daniel Raimi is an energy policy researcher and analyst with expertise on issues including oil and gas markets and policy, regulation of unconventional oil and gas production, state fiscal policy design for oil and gas production, the climate implications of shale gas development, and federal climate policy design. He has published in academic journals including Science, Environmental Science and Technology, Journal of Economic Perspectives, and the Annual Review of Resource Economics, and made numerous presentations for policymakers, industry and other stakeholders around the United States. He received his master’s degree in public policy from Duke University’s Sanford School of Public Policy and his bachelor’s degree in music from Wesleyan University. Daniel teaches "Oil and Gas Policy in the United States," at the Ford School. His first book, The Fracking Debate, will be published by Columbia University Press in December, 2017.
Is energy 'dominance' the right goal for US policy?
Jun 28, 2017 16:02 pm UTC| Insights & Views Politics
In recent weeks, a new energy buzzword has taken flight from Washington, D.C., making stops in Alaska, North Dakota, Texas, Utah and more: American energy dominance. Taking a cue from a 2016 speech by then-candidate Donald...
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