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Repsol
YPF - Harvard Kennedy School Fellows Program
Center for Business and
Government
2004-2005 Fellows
Application
Information | Past
Fellows
Senior Industry Fellow
Ms.
Sarah Emerson
Managing
Director
Energy
Security Analysis, Inc.

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Sarah
Emerson is the Managing Director of Energy Security
Analysis, Inc. (ESAI), an independent energy research and
forecasting firm in Boston, Massachusetts. Ms. Emerson
joined ESAI when the petroleum consulting practice was
launched in 1986. As Director of Petroleum Analysis, she has
developed many of ESAI’s analytical tools for assessing
the oil market and forecasting oil prices. In addition, she
has supervised the development of an empirical source
database of monthly oil data that covers the period from
January 1978 to the present for every country in the world,
with particular focus on non-OECD countries. More broadly,
she has conducted several industry studies on a diverse
range of topics, such as the transfer of pollution in energy
trade, the profitability of Asian refining, the future of
the Asian bitumen market, petroleum product markets in the
Indian Ocean, the outlook for global automotive fuel
markets, and the future of the Russian refining industry.
She regularly publishes articles in the energy trade press
and is frequently quoted in the press and interviewed on
television. Ms. Emerson received her B.A. from Cornell
University and her M.A. from the Johns Hopkins University
Nitze School of Advanced International Studies. In addition
to her market analysis and forecasting activities, Ms.
Emerson is an expert witness in energy sector litigation and
an adviser to the U.S., Japanese, and Indian governments on
energy security issues.
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Post-Doctoral
Fellow
Dr.
Juan Delgado
Directorate
General for Competition
European
Commission, Brussels

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Juan
Delgado is an economist at the Directorate General for
Competition of the European Commission (Brussels, Belgium),
where he aids in the development of telecommunications
systems, local loop unbundling, broadband systems, antitrust,
and regulatory policy. Previously, he worked as an economist
with the Spanish telecommunications regulator CMT, where he
dealt with liberalization, regulation, and antitrust issues.
He has also taught economics at the Universidad Carlos III in
Madrid, Spain. He holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the
Universidad Carlos III and a M.S. in Economics from Warwick
University in the United Kingdom. He has written on
competition issues in liberalized industries, and has
published in the Journal of Economic Theory and in the Journal
of Industrial Economics. Juan received the Universidad Carlos
III Ph.D. Extraordinary Award (2001-2003) for the best Ph.D.
thesis in economics and the British Council and the Fundacion
Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo scholarship to complete his
M.S. in Economics at the University of Warwick.
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Post-Doctoral Fellow
Dr.
Jens Weinmann, Ph.D.
Decision Science
University
of London
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Jens
Weinmann is currently finishing his Ph.D. in Decision
Science at London Business School, University of London. His
research focuses on institutional changes in the Latin
American energy sector over the last two decades, with a
special emphasis on electricity markets in the context of
developing countries. He is exploring the dynamics of
electricity sector regulation and liberalization with a view
on factors that accelerate or delay regulatory reforms,
including the natural resource endowment and its
consequences on governmental policies. He is interested in
the phenomenon of policy emulation and institutional
isomorphism and has analyzed the spread of liberalization
policies across Latin America, combining multivariate
statistics with sociological theories. Most recently, he
explored institutional change from a corporate perspective
in respect to the privatizations of generation and
distribution companies during the 1990s. He studied at the
Technical University in Berlin. After joining the Decision
Science Department at London Business School, he also
collaborated with the World Energy Council on the study
“Pricing Energy in Developing Countries.” During his
studies in Berlin and London, he received grants from the
German National Merit Foundation (Studienstiftung des
deutschen Volkes) and the Economic and Social Research
Council (ESRC).
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Pre-Doctoral
Fellow
Ms.
Fan Zhang
Ph.D.
Candidate, Public Policy
Harvard
University

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Fan
Zhang is a Ph.D. candidate in Public Policy at the Kennedy
School of Government, Harvard University where she is a
Pre-Doctoral Fellow with the Belfer Center for Science and
International Affairs and the Environmental Economics
Program. She is interested in environmental and energy
economics and international environmental policy. Her
current research analyzes the impact of multi-dimensional
uncertainties of the deregulated electricity market on
producers’ investment decisions regarding clean
technology. Fan received her M.S. in Environmental Economics
and Management from Peking University in 2002 and a B.S. in
Environmental Science from Zhongshan University in 1999,
both with the highest honors. From 1999 to 2003, she worked
with the Center for Environmental Sciences of Peking
University, The Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
on development and environmental protection issues,
including regional water and air quality management,
national land use, land cover change analysis, and green
accounting systems.
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Pre-Doctoral Fellow
Ms.
Hailing Zang
Ph.D.
Candidate, Economics
Texas
A&M University

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Hailing
Zang is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of
Economics, Texas A&M University. Her research interests
are empirical industrial organization, game theory, and
econometrics. She wishes to apply recently developed
empirical auction methodologies and game theory to the
study of the wholesale electricity market and particularly
to the empirical study of the impact of financial
transmission rights on the efficiency of the wholesale
electricity market. She is currently studying oligopoly
supply function equilibrium under dynamic games and the
impact of financial transmission rights on bidding behavior.
At Texas A&M University, where she works as a research
assistant for Prof. Steven Puller on the study of the Texas
electricity market, she was awarded the Regents Fellowship.
She received a bachelor’s degree in Economics from Fudan
University in Shanghai, China. She was also awarded Shanghai
Outstanding Student Award, the highest honor to
undergraduate students in the city of Shanghai.
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Application
Information on the Fellows Program click
here.
For
further information contact: constance_burns@harvard.edu
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