2013
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2296080
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Sector Effects of the Shale Gas Revolution in the United States

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Cited by 15 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Objects of analysis include effects on employment, income or the property market but also social dynamics [20,22,26,49,53,66,81,114,115,152], local risks, risk perception and risk governance [63,64,90,131,135] or questions of energy justice [41,105]. 3 With regard to discipline, studies in these areas are biased toward sociological approaches and ethnography but also law.…”
Section: Reviewing the Literature On Shale Gasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Objects of analysis include effects on employment, income or the property market but also social dynamics [20,22,26,49,53,66,81,114,115,152], local risks, risk perception and risk governance [63,64,90,131,135] or questions of energy justice [41,105]. 3 With regard to discipline, studies in these areas are biased toward sociological approaches and ethnography but also law.…”
Section: Reviewing the Literature On Shale Gasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…years (see Krupnick et al, 2013). It has been estimated that, with these low gas prices in the U.S., the liquid content must be around 40% in order to exploit a well without a loss (IEA, 2012a).…”
Section: Current and Potential Production Of Gas Within And Outside Tmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apart from ethane, however, also other industrial sectors take advantage of unconventional gas exploitation. The American Chemistry Council calculated the effects of an increase of unconventional gas production with 25% on the production of eight energy-intensive manufacturing industries using the Input-Output model IMPLAN (American Chemistry Council, 2012;Krupnick et al, 2013). They report that approximately 85% of the output gains comes from the Chemicals and Plastics and Rubber Industry, where the direct output gains increased with 14,5% and 17,9%, respectively.…”
Section: Competitiveness Impacts On Subsectors In the Eumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Likewise, the expenditures associated with the extraction activities and the associated workforce can be substantial, and have the potential to benefit local economies significantly (Rahm, ; Krupnick et al., ; Kinnaman, ; Weber, ). The scope of such impacts will depend in part on the extent to which local residents fill new energy‐sector jobs, vacancies left in lagging sectors as employment shifts to the leading energy sector, and the ability of the local workforce to meet new energy‐sector needs.…”
Section: Future Challenges To Unconventional Shale and Oil Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%