How American Oil & Gas Can Secure the Energy Future - Feb. 5, 2025

  • Registration Closed

This is a recording, from the 2023 Annual Meeting. It is a complimentary webinar for AAPL members.

Time: 11am-12pm CST

Date: Feb. 5, 2025

The world’s current energy crisis, and growing reliance on natural gas as a cleaner source of energy, is
making the world more and more dependent on U.S. oil and gas, and particularly its natural gas exports
to provide flexible and secure energy.

Speaker: James Coleman

1 CEU

This webinar is complimentary for AAPL members! Not an AAPL member? Renew or join today!

AAPL MEMBER TYPES & JOIN AAPL MEMBER BENEFITS


Special thanks to AAPL's Alliance Partners for supporting our energy education offerings, including free-for-member webinars, as well as vital legislative advocacy, industry outreach and so much more. 

image

AAPL'S ALLIANCE PROGRAM

Key:

Complete
Failed
Available
Locked
How American Oil & Gas Can Secure the Energy Future - Feb. 5, 2025
02/05/2025 at 11:00 AM (CST)  |  Recorded On: 02/05/2025
02/05/2025 at 11:00 AM (CST)  |  Recorded On: 02/05/2025
Post Webinar Survey
4 Questions
Certificate
Live and Archive Viewing: 1.00 CEU credit and certificate available
Live and Archive Viewing: 1.00 CEU credit and certificate available

James W. Coleman

Professor of Law

SMU Dedman School of Law

James Coleman received two degrees from Harvard University — a J.D. (cum laude) and B.A. in biology (magna cum laude) with highest honors in the field. Upon graduation from law school he served as clerk for Eighth Circuit Judge Steven Colloton, and then practiced energy, environmental, and appellate law as an associate in the Washington, D.C., firm of Sidley Austin LLP for three years. 

Prior to joining SMU, he was on the faculty at the University of Calgary, where he taught at both the law school and the business school. Before Calgary, he served on the faculty at Harvard Law School as a Climenko Fellow and Lecturer on Law. 

Coleman’s scholarship addresses regulation of North American energy companies, focusing on how countries account for and influence regulation of fuel and electricity in their trading partners and how global energy companies respond to competing pressures from investors and regulators in multiple jurisdictions. He publishes the Energy Law Professor blog and you can follow him on Twitter at @energylawprof. This fall he will teach Oil & Gas Law.