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Proposed Tax Breaks for Natural Gas Industry Are Bad Deal for Pennsylvanians | The Penn... - 0 views

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    If the General Assembly adopts both proposed exemptions, only one-third of total gas production at a typical Marcellus Shale well would be subject to severance tax, and companies would pay tax for only nine years of the 40-year life of the well. This two-
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PDF VERSION - 0 views

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    Pennsylvania faces a projected General Fund shortfall of at least $500 million. Gov. Rendell proposed a $29 billion budget for 2010-11 that increases business taxes, imposes new taxes on natural gas and tobacco products, and expanding the sales tax to inc
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Petrochemicals: A success story - Yahoo! News Maktoob - 0 views

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    even
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A Need for Post-Impact and Policy Studies: The Case of the "Shetland Experience" - 0 views

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    "A Need for Post-Impact and Policy Studies: The Case of the "Shetland Experience"
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Supply Glut Pushing Natural Gas Drillers to Ohio - Keystone Politics - 0 views

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    During the Marcellus Shale debate, one of the Republican talking points we heard was that if PA's severance tax was too high, or if our environmental regulations were too strict, natural gas drillers would move across the border to Ohio. The theory was that high taxes and high regulatory costs would lead to less drilling, by driving up the cost of production. This was always a silly argument, since less drilling would mean higher prices for gas, and leading to more sustained interest in drilling.
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Women in Energy Boom Towns - 0 views

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    "Women in Energy Boom Towns"
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Impact Mitigation in Western Energy Boomtowns - 0 views

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    "Impact Mitigation in Western Energy Boomtowns"
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Counterfactual impact evaluation - 0 views

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    "An introduction illustrates the two conceptually distinct sets of questions behind impact evaluation.  The first set of questions is devoted to establishing whether a given intervention produces the desired effects on some dimension of interest.  The key question here: "does it make a difference?" This is answered by identifying and estimating causal effects through counterfactual methods.  The second set of questions is primarily devoted to understand why an intervention produces intended and unintended effects, for whom and in which context. The key question here: "why and when does it work?". This is answered by identifying the theory of change behind the program and assessing its success by comparing theory with actual implementation."
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Fear of Crime in Rapidly Changing Rural Communities: A Longitudinal Analysis. - 0 views

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    "Fear of Crime in Rapidly Changing Rural Communities: A Longitudinal Analysis"
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Method and techniques - 0 views

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    "Method and techniques Introduction Structuring evaluation Collecting information Conducting impact assessments Evaluating alternatives Regression analysis Counterfactual impact evaluation Theory-based impact evaluation Modelling"
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Welcome - 0 views

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    "Welcome Evalsed is an online resource providing guidance on the evaluation of socio-economic development. It promotes exchange of experience and good practice as well as increasing the relevance of evaluation in decision-making. Whilst the resource has a specific focus on evaluation in EU cohesion policy, it is also relevant to the evaluation of other socio-economic development tools. Evalsed is currently under development. In the policy debate, there is an ever increasing focus on the need for evidence on the performance of cohesion policy.  Policy makers need to know "what works?" and "why?".  The experiences of ongoing evaluation for 2007-2013 and the thematic ex post evaluation of the 2000-2006 period also demonstrate the greater potential for evaluations of themes or interventions to deliver credible results. Evalsed has traditionally focused on programme evaluations. Following these recent evaluation experiences and discussions at the Warsaw conference on evaluation methods [http://ec.europa.eu/regional_policy/conferences/evaluation2009/index_en.htm], Evalsed will be redeveloped. Evalsed consists of two parts: THE GUIDE and three SOURCEBOOKS."
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Criminal Behavior and Rapid Community Growth: Examining the Evidence1 - Freudenburg - 2... - 0 views

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    "Criminal Behavior and Rapid Community Growth: Examining the Evidence"
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NaturalGas.org - 0 views

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    Naturalgas.org is presented as an educational website covering a variety of topics related to the natural gas industry. The purpose of this website is to provide visitors with a comprehensive information source for topics related to natural gas, and prese
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Natural gas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Natural gas is a gas consisting primarily of methane. It is found associated with other fossil fuels, in coal beds, as methane clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills. It is an important fuel source, a major fe
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EIA - Natural Gas Data, Reports, Analysis, Surveys - 0 views

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    Home > Natural Gas Natural Gas
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Shell Gets In On Natural Gas Rush Previously Dominated By Small Players - Daily Brief -... - 0 views

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    Shell, which has its North American headquarters in Houston, bought all of the acreage of East Resources Inc. in the Marcellus shale for $4.7 billion, totaling 650,000 contiguous net acres and more than 1 million acres overall in West Virginia and Pennsyl
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Guest Column: Natural Gas Severance Tax: Still A Bad Idea - Opinion - Daily Review - 0 views

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    The Marcellus Shale boom is accomplishing something that all of Governor Rendell's economic development programs cannot: permanent jobs and more state tax revenue without a dime of taxpayer subsidies. Resisting the calls to tax natural gas producers will
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Full Document - 0 views

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    This report examines the key effects a California oil severance tax would have and pinpoints the lessons that can be learned from California about the effects of severance taxes more generally. The report establishes the range of potential revenues the ta
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Does Wyoming Get Enough for Its Mineral Riches? Severance Tax Reform in the Cowboy State - 0 views

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    In December 2007, Governor Sarah Palin gave Alaskans a nice present. Courtesy Image Courtesy Image She signed legislation boosting Alaska's severance tax. The state would now take 25 percent of taxable income derived from oil and gas production. Previou
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YouTube - energy's Channel - 0 views

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    The Economic Impacts of the Marcellus Shale From: energy | July 21, 2010 | 63 views Loading... http://EnergyTomorrow.org Timothy J. Considine, Ph.D. of Natural Resource Economics, shares his new study on natural gas production in the Marcellus Shale re
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