Ferdinand E. Banks | TalkMarkets | Page 2
Professor, Independent Oil & Energy Professional
Professor Ferdinand E. Banks (Uppsala University, Sweden), performed his undergraduate studies at Illinois Institute of Technology (electrical engineering) and Roosevelt University (Chicago), graduating with honors in economics. He also attended the University of Maryland and UCLA. He has the MSc ...more

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17 to 32 of 35 Posts
Seizing The Energy Day
The only thing better than subsidies for nuclear plants is governments and private enterprises working together to develop and utilize the nuclear technologies that will become available during this or the next decade.
A Setting Sun For Oil
When the oil price touched $147/b in 2008, OPEC supported the myth that it was speculation (i.e. gambling) and not fundamentals (i.e. supply and demand) that was the villain.
Some Myth And Meaning In The Great World Of Oil Economics
When the oil price touched $147/b in 2008, OPEC supported the myth that it was due to speculation (i.e. gambling) and not fundamentals (i.e. supply and demand) that was the villain.
A Russian Energy Reality
For some ignorant reason Exxon has been forbidden to work with Russians again, but Mr Putin doesn’t care. Why should he?
Still More Bad Memories About Electric Deregulations
The 1992 law that provides open access to alternative natural gas suppliers, for instance, went through at least seven years of revisions.
Thoughts On Nuclear Energy: Smoke And Mirrors
Many observers refuse to understand the deleterious macroeconomic implications associated with investing in excessive – amounts of renewables and alternatives.
More On Germany And Nuclear
The dilemma where I am concerned has to do with the preposterous notion that wind and solar based energy can completely replace nuclear, where by “replace” I mean supply the electricity necessary to maintain the present or an improved standard of living.
Helpful Thoughts About Coal
A former Swedish prime minister called nuclear energy “obsolete”, and the present U.S. president apparently has similar thoughts about coal.
Oil And Me
Oil prices are at a four-year low of $85 per barrel, when they were more than $110/b in the middle of this summer.
Economics Of Nuclear Energy
Nuclear intensity in Germany and Japan could be the highest in the world at mid-century.
Are You Afraid Of A Big Bad Oil Shock?
Where energy matters are concerned, rationality has a way of being in short supply.
Back To Basics: Energy And Industrial Progress
Something I never fail to stress in my formal lectures or informal harangues is the value of moderately priced electricity in an industrial economy, and on this score Sweden was once in the forefront of world economies.
Russian Oil
A surprising number of energy experts are prone to make mistakes when considering the oil future. There are several fundamental facts that need to be understood about Russian oil.
The War On Coal
In the struggle to reduce poverty and declining standards of living, coal is an invaluable weapon. But like many wars, the war on coal does not always make a great deal of sense, whether in terms of intentions or methods.
The Argument For Nuclear Revival
Had I been allowed into the building, this would have been the keynote address I would have presented at the International Association of Energy Economists.
Coal And Some Economic Logic
Apparently pension funds in the U.S. have ignored calls from mayors, city councils, break-dancers, moonwalkers, hustlers and pseudo-intellectuals to forget about the viability of their business models and ditch (i.e. divest) their fossil fuel shares/stocks. They shouldn't...
17 to 32 of 35 Posts