Brian Prest

575 posts

Brian Prest banner
Brian Prest

Brian Prest

@bprest

Economist @rff, via @DukeU, @NERA_Economics, & @USCBO. Opinions my own.

Washington, DC انضم Ekim 2010
1K يتبع667 المتابعون
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
The reduced royalty rates do encourage additional production, which DOGMA accounts for, but not nearly enough to overcome the substantial reduction in federal revenue. I’ll be posting additional details of this analysis on RFF’s web site later this week--stay tuned!
English
0
0
0
77
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
These values represent only the approximately 50% share of royalties retained by the federal government, so the cuts would lead to similarly large revenue losses to the states where the oil and gas is being produced.
English
1
0
0
84
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
The House Natural Resources Committee today is marking up its piece of the reconciliation bill currently making its way through Congress.
English
1
1
2
636
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
RT @nberpubs: Discounting in benefit-cost analysis using investment rates of return can yield very misleading estimates of the costs and be…
English
0
15
0
0
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
RT @DanielRaimi: Psyched about this new @rff working paper from @bprest, Zach Whitlock, & me. It asks: in a future with more ambitious clim…
English
0
19
0
0
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
@DByers21 @DanielRaimi @DxGordon But--and this is key--it is incredibly unlikely that reducing oil supply results in more emissions. That would require (1) oil demand to be ~perfectly inelastic and (2) implausible substitution patterns (e.g., Gulf of Mexico oil being partially replaced by oil sands)
Brian Prest tweet media
English
1
0
2
94
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
@DByers21 @DanielRaimi @DxGordon In my recent paper, I do the emissions impact calculation both at the play level (e.g. Permian basin) and aggregated by region (e.g., N. America) using the OCI+ data. Roughly speaking, the emissions effects vary by field, but less than you might expect. rff.org/publications/w…
English
1
0
2
40
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
This is super important for properly measuring the benefits of climate policy and regulations. like the @EPA's soon-to-be announced successor to the Clean Power Plan.
English
0
0
1
235
Brian Prest
Brian Prest@bprest·
In the near term, the difference is small. We show this by redoing the cost-benefit analysis of the 2015 Clean Power Plan, showing that the SPC approach is similar to using 7% for near-term benefits (here, health cobenefits), but massively different for long-term climate benefits
English
1
0
1
241