University of Dundee
University of Dundee

University of Dundee

Nethergate, Dundee DD1 4HN, United Kingdom Dundee, United Kingdom Visit web page

International Energy Law and Policy

Study detals

: Master's degree : LLM (Hons) International Energy Law and Policy : Full time : 12 Month

Requirements

Your degree should be in law, economics, finance, geology, petroleum, or mining engineering.

Entry requirements

Your degree should be in law, economics, finance, geology, petroleum, or mining engineering.

English language requirements

IELTS Academic

  • Overall 6.5
  • Writing 6.0
  • Listening 5.5
  • Reading 5.5
  • Speaking 6.0

We also accept other English language qualifications. (TOEFEL iBT, Trinity ISE, LANGUAGECERT Academic..)

Don’t meet the English language requirements?

Pre-sessional English for international students. If you hold a conditional offer and have not yet met the English entry requirements for a degree course at the University, we can help you with our pre-sessional English courses.

Speciality

Pathways Available: Pre-Master's

15 months : 3 months pathway + 1 year degree

18 months : 6 months pathway + 1 year degree

International College Dundee

If you do not meet our academic grade requirements for your chosen course, we can offer you an alternative route to begin your studies. Our international incorporated degrees will develop your subject knowledge, academic English and university level study skills.

Tuition fees for International students will increase by no more than 5% per year for the length of your course.

Additional information

Degree Overview

Study how government decisions on the provision of energy are structured and enforced. You’ll learn about how the rules and agreements link together to access energy and take it to the consumer.

This course focuses on electricity and gas, with options to study hydrocarbon production. You’ll examine how energy is regulated, the legal structure of electricity and gas industries, and the liberalisation of energy markets.

You will learn about the pressures of energy transition (using gas as a bridge to more renewable power), energy disputes and dispute resolution, and the influences of environmental standards between different countries.

You’ll also study:
The international and domestic dimensions of electricity and gas as markets integrate
Regulatory controls over energy markets – and the space for government intervention
The interaction of long term contracts and short term markets
The allocation of risk between producers / generators and suppliers
project financing of energy ventures
How governments get what they want as private investors provide the service
The mechanisms to pass through costs or impose subsidies