STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics

Home

Announcements

  • Expression of Interest
  • Aims and Scope

Journal Submission Guidelines

STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics is an open access and peer-reviewed international journal and welcomes original papers from academicians, researchers and practitioners alike, and particularly encourages submissions that draw on policy-oriented theoretical and empirical research focusing on all aspects of the energy sector and the environment and their interdependence, including non-energy environmental and natural resource issues, policies and sources of energy, energy security, national security and primary emitter of local, regional, and global pollutants.

The papers should generally be 6000-8000 words with abstract of not more than 200 words, though more substantial papers will be considered. The contributions to STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics should reflect the interdisciplinary emphasis, which is fundamental to the journal. The papers will be double-blind refereed using an appropriate cross-section of reviewers drawn from the target interests. The journal adheres to zero plagiarism policy and require submission of plagiarism report along with the paper. The journal aims for a turn-around time of two months from submission to publication to ensure rapid dissemination and dynamic discussion of ideas and results. The Editor, therefore, welcomes early contact prior to submission of manuscripts with, for example, an abstract. Book reviews are also included.

STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics will be of interest to academicians, researchers and practitioners working in interdisciplinary fields across the social, natural and engineering sciences, policy and decision makers in national and local government and relevant agencies, and non-governmental organisations. The Editorial Board provides a unique mix of expertise from both the academic community and a full range of interested parties.

STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics is an interdisciplinary, peer reviewed, international journal covering policy and decision-making relating to environmental and energy economics in the broadest sense. Uniquely, its specific aim is to strengthen environmental and energy economics research focusing on integration of economics input in planning, designing, and evaluation and enhancing the competence in environmental and energy policy analysis. The focus of the STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics is on environmental and energy economics and policy analysis. STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics welcomes the research papers in the areas of energy efficiency, conservation and renewable energy programmes, pollution abatement technology, the role of pollution havens, regulated electricity markets, pollution-tax incidence, and effects of environmental policy on employment, morbidity, and mortality. The journal aims to provide a forum for imaginative and creative thinking around the theoretical and empirical foundations of environmental and energy economics research.

The areas covered, and their inter-relationships in informing decision-making and policy, therefore include gasoline consumption, oil imports and environmental quality, policies on gasoline taxes, fuel-efficiency regulation and alternative fuel subsidies, automobiles and fuel economy and efficiency, technological progress and fuel economy, carbon fuel standards, greenhouse gas emissions and reductions, policies and proposals for alternative fuels, energy markets, climate change and energy production and consumption, domestic natural gas markets, residential and commercial gas customers, and electricity prices.

The contribution to the STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics should broadly focus on following themes (but are not restricted to):

  1. Environment and scarcity of resources
  2. Technology and resource limitations
  3. Environment and human economy
  4. Markets and natural resources
  5. Common-pool resources and economic systems
  6. Environmental externalities and economic effects
  7. Environmental regulation and macroeconomic impact
  8. Pollution control, technology, and market failures
  9. Regulation and property rights in the environment
  10. Environment and climate change effects
  11. Valuing the environment
  12. Environmental project evaluation
  13. Environmental impact assessment and management
  14. Environmental risk assessment and management
  15. Environmental ethics and justice
  16. Population and resource scarcity
  17. Population-driven environmental degradation
  18. Technology and environmental degradation
  19. Economic growth and the environment
  20. Biophysical resources and growth
  21. Environment and sustainable development
  22. Sustainability and sustainable development
  23. International trade, development, and environment
  24. Growth, poverty, and environmental impact
  25. Gender, poverty, and environmental degradation
  26. Environmental governance and sustainability
  27. Climate change policy and environment
  28. Technology for environmental protection
  29. Environmental protection and ecosystem services policies
  30. Trade policy, environment, and efficiency
  31. Environmental quality and economic security
  32. Environmental policy effects on employment, morbidity, and mortality
  33. Energy sector and environmental interdependence
  34. Energy markets and market failures
  35. Trade, energy markets, and climate change
  36. Decarbonization, energy markets, and international trade
  37. Green energy transition and hydrogen economy
  38. Carbon border adjustments and local content rules
  39. Trade restrictions on solar components
  40. LNG export policies
  41. Geopolitics and hydrocarbon policies
  42. Energy and trade policy
  43. Economic and environmental effects of carbon border adjustments
  44. Trade protection and renewable energy
  45. Trade policies for fossil fuels, renewables, and energy goods
  46. Economics and political economy of carbon border adjustments
  47. Carbon tariffs and international energy economics
  48. Domestic energy policy and global trade interactions
  49. Energy trade policies and protectionism
  50. FDI and energy markets
  51. Multinational production and energy markets
  52. Foreign investment and energy markets
  53. International energy market integration
  54. Drivers of clean energy transition
  55. Energy technology trade and economy
  56. Global and regional energy trade
  57. Trade sanctions and energy markets
  58. Technological innovation and diffusion
  59. Adoption of clean energy technologies
  60. Investment incentives in energy
  61. Climate mitigation technologies
  62. Alternative energy and climate change
  63. Energy patents and technology development
  64. Energy efficiency and conservation
  65. Pollution regulation
  66. Economic effects of environmental policies
  67. Global climate policy and emissions regulation
  68. Power sector and electricity pricing
  69. Environmental and energy policy integration
  70. Energy efficiency, conservation, and renewable programs
  71. Pollution abatement technologies
  72. Pollution havens and their role
  73. Regulated electricity markets
  74. Pollution tax effects
  75. Non-energy environmental and resource policies
  76. Energy sources and security
  77. National and regional energy security
  78. Major local, regional, and global pollutant emitters
  79. Oil imports and environmental quality
  80. Gasoline taxation policies
  81. Fuel-efficiency regulations and alternative fuel subsidies
  82. Automobiles, fuel economy, and efficiency
  83. Technological progress and fuel economy
  84. Carbon fuel standards
  85. Greenhouse gas emissions and reduction strategies
  86. Alternative fuel policies and proposals
  87. Climate change and energy markets
  88. Energy production and consumption
  89. Domestic energy markets and pricing
  90. Zero-carbon economy and carbon neutrality

Send your paper to Email: strat.institute@gmail.com

“STRATI Journal of Environmental and Energy Economics” invites the university professors, researchers, and experts including experts based in government and non-government agencies and communities and members of civil society to serve as Editor(s), Sub-Editor(s), Guest Editors, Members on Advisory Board, and Peer Review Board in varied areas of scientific knowledge and expertise.

The expression of interest along with the Curriculum Vitae including a passport size and Google Scholar link can be sent to the Consulting Editor at E-mail: strat.institute@gmail.com