Robert Bryce
Robert Bryce is a senior fellow with the Center for Energy Policy and the Environment at the Manhattan Institute. He has written about the energy business for two decades.
• Oil and Gas Production and Taxation
• Renewable/Alternative Energy
• Climate Change/Cap-and-Trade Legislation
• Nuclear Technology
Peter Huber
Peter Huber is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute's Center for Legal Policy, writing on the issues of science, technology, and the law.
• Energy policy
• Environmental Policy
• Telecommunications & Information Technology
• Tort Reform
• Science in the Courts
James Manzi
James Manzi is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, writing on topics related to science, technology, business and economics.
• The Economics of Energy & Climate Change
• Science, Technology & Public Policy

Media Inquiries:
Clarice Smith
Deputy Director,
Communications,
212-599-7000
csmith@manhattan-institute.org

A Conversation on Energy Policy

A Conversation on
Energy Policy

Steve Forbes & Peter Huber

A Short Film
High | Low Bandwidth

Center for Energy Policy and the Environment.

About the Center for Energy Policy and the Environment

The United States has enjoyed a relatively stable supply of energy over the last half-century. But the world is changing. Global demand for energy is booming, in large part because of economic growth in India and China. Meanwhile concerns about climate change are influencing how lawmakers shape public policy.

Legitimate questions are being raised about how to satisfy growing U.S. energy demand. The Center for Energy Policy and the Environment (CEPE) at the Manhattan Institute seeks to influence today’s energy policy debate by developing and advancing ideas rooted in free-market economic principles. Manhattan Institute senior fellows Robert Bryce, Peter Huber, and James Manzi lead our efforts to demonstrate that pro-growth, supply-side energy policies can be harmonized with environmental concerns.

For two decades, Robert Bryce has written about the energy business. He is the author of four books, including Power Hungry: The Myths of “Green” Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future, published in April 2010 by PublicAffairs. A New York Times review of 2008’s Gusher of Lies called Bryce “something of a visionary and perhaps even a revolutionary.” Since 2005, he has served as managing editor of Energy Tribune, an online publication that focuses on the global energy sector.

Peter Huber is coauthor, most recently, of The Bottomless Well, a bestseller that Bill Gates called “the only book I’ve ever seen that really explains energy, its history and what it will be like going forward.” Huber is a regular columnist at Forbes and author or coauthor of several books on environmental, telecommunications, and legal policy.

James Manzi is the founder and chairman of Applied Predictive Technologies and a contributing editor of National Review. He writes extensively on the integration of science, technology, and economics, as well as issues relating to social policy. Manzi received a B.S. in mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was subsequently awarded a Dean’s Fellowship to the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania’s doctoral program in applied statistics.

Through research papers, op-eds, and interviews, CEPE seeks to challenge conventional wisdom on economic and national-security issues while promoting development of advanced energy technolo­gies. The Center strives to be the indispensable resource in the energy debate.

The Center for Energy Policy and the Environment includes Manhattan Institute Senior Fellows Robert Bryce, Peter Huber and James Manzi.

On Wednesday, February 24, 2010, the Manhattan Institute hosted a panel discussion on the possibilities of expanded natural gas production, and what that could mean for New York State. Robert Catell, Chairman of the Advanced Energy & Research Technology Center at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, delivered the keynote address.
Panelists included: Timothy Considine, Professor of Energy Economics at the University of Wyoming; Craig Michaels, Watershed Program Director at Riverkeeper and Doug Barton, Director of Economic Development and Planning for Tioga County, NY.

The full audio of the event can be heard here.

 

RECENT ARTICLES:

  • The Top Kill: "It will surprise no one if it doesn't work" Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune, 05-27-10
  • The Ethanol Trap Robert Bryce, Slate, 06-10-10
  • The Deepwater Horizon Blowout: Losers and Winners Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune, 06-10-10
  • The Blowout And Our Addiction To Prosperity Robert Bryce, Washington Examiner, 05-26-10
  • A Short Lesson In Scale (and Global Power Demand) Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune, 05-24-10
  • Enron's Ken Lay and BP's Tony Hayward: Paid to Be Reckless Robert Bryce, The Daily Beast, 06-25-10
  • Addicted to Prosperity Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune, 06-18-10
  • NEW BOOK
    Power Hungry THE Power Hungry: The Myths of "Green" Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future
    by Robert Bryce

    LATEST RELEASES

    Kill Oil with Natural Gas and Electricity: A Carbon Strategy the World Can Afford
    By Peter W. Huber

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    - What impact do inaccurate assumptions have on public policy?

    Taxing Energy in the US: Which Fuels Does the Tax Code Favor?
    By Gilbert E. Metcalf

    The Million-Volt Answer to Oil
    By Peter Huber

    NY Unplugged? Building Energy Capacity and Curbing Energy Rates
    By Max Schulz

    Nuclear Power: The Investment Outlook
    By Nicole Gelinas

    ENERGY AND THE ENVIRON-
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    THE BOTTOMLESS WELL
    THE BOTTOMLESS WELL.THE BOTTOMLESS WELL: The Twilight Of Fuel, The Virtue Of Waste, And Why We Will Never Run Out Of Energy
    by Peter Huber and Mark P. Mills (Basic Books, 2005)

     

     

     

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