Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:354Hits:19957738Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID127164
Title ProperRegulatory capture by default
Other Title Informationoffshore exploratory drilling for oil and gas
LanguageENG
AuthorPortman, Michelle E
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines a form of regulatory capture that occurs when significant ambiguity exists regarding the environmental protection standards for new types of activities in the marine environment. To begin with, there is little research that categorizes the typologies of regulatory capture despite the ubiquity of the phenomenon. After a discussion of theoretical approaches to regulatory capture, I describe the operative definition and theory appropriate to the situation related to authorization of oil and natural gas production in Israel following the discovery of large offshore reserves in 2010. This approach, embodying several facets of existing typologies, is applied to decisions made authorizing construction of the Gabriella offshore exploratory drilling platform. The analysis highlights the nature of capture in the absence of clear agency jurisdiction over new activities located in offshore environs organized as temporal and spatial "vacuums". I conclude that comprehensive marine spatial planning would result in less capture and the development of more capture-resistant regulations.
`In' analytical NoteEnergy Policy Vol.65, No. ; February 2014: p.37-47
Journal SourceEnergy Policy Vol.65, No. ; February 2014: p.37-47
Key WordsRegulatory Capture ;  Offshore Gas Drilling ;  Temporal and Spatial Vacuums ;  Marine Spatial Planning ;  Energy Policy ;  Middle East ;  OPEC ;  Israel ;  Petro Power ;  Economic Interest ;  Natural Gas ;  Comprehensive Marine ;  Spatial Planning ;  Marine Environment ;  Capture-Resistant Regulations ;  Government Policies