1982
DOI: 10.6028/nbs.sp.631
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Oil and gas supply modeling

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Cited by 4 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…(This reinforces our stress, in Section 3 above, on the possibilities for sensitivity and parametric analysis of game-theoretic models.) A third observation ( [154], pp. 3, [74][75] is that the severity of the "due process" criterion will naturally depend on the salience of model-use in arriving at the regulatory decision already substantially determined, to a maximum role in which model outputs become the determinate guidelines for decisions.…”
Section: Viabilitv In Regulatory Settingsmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…(This reinforces our stress, in Section 3 above, on the possibilities for sensitivity and parametric analysis of game-theoretic models.) A third observation ( [154], pp. 3, [74][75] is that the severity of the "due process" criterion will naturally depend on the salience of model-use in arriving at the regulatory decision already substantially determined, to a maximum role in which model outputs become the determinate guidelines for decisions.…”
Section: Viabilitv In Regulatory Settingsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Another illustration is given by the large-scale modeling systemsmore or less descendants of the Project Independence Energy System (PIES)-developed and operated by the Department of Energy; cf. for example Gass [154] and Gass et al [155], Johnson [157] describes operational application in fisheries regulation. More generally, it seems clear that many quantitative issues involved in a regulatory judgment--the effect on competition of a proposed merger, the effect on regional pollution levels of a proposed change in processing fuels or technology, the adequacy of continuing current charges to provide a reasonable rate of return for a public utility-involve complexities and data-volumes that must be receiving formal mathematical treatment.…”
Section: Viabilitv In Regulatory Settingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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