Vote now in the 2011 Energy Risk magazine Software Rankings!
Vote now in the Energy Risk 2011 Software Ranking!
Energy Risk magazine would like to invite you to participate in their Annual ETRM Software Survey & Rankings 2011.
The survey should take no longer than 10 minutes to complete. Consultants, please answer the questions using your knowledge of the market and from your clients' point of view where applicable.
All responses will remain strictly confidential and personal information will not be published or released to any third party.
For your contribution you have the opportunity to receive a free trial to our magazine at the end of the survey. Respondents will also be entered in a draw to win a 12 prizes - a year's subscription to Energy Risk magazine and online access, a free delegate pass to one of 7 Energy Risk conference and a seat at one of the three Energy Risk Awards dinners.
Invalid votes: When aggregating the results, we will discount what we consider to be invalid votes. These include (but are not restricted to):
• Participants voting for their own firm or company, or relatives of an employee or director of that company voting for them;
• Multiple votes from the same person;
• Multiple votes from the same IP address;
• Proxy votes on behalf of customers (even if authorisation has been given);
• Votes from Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail accounts (or similar);
• Votes by participants who clearly do not trade the relevant product
• Organised group voting patterns e.g. block votes from groups of participants on the same desk at the same institution voting for the same firm
• Inducements to vote in a particular way e.g. gifts, drinks or entertainment
• Any other indication that an unfair attempt has been made to influence the poll.
Emailed votes from companies and firms that send mass emails copying and pasting parts of our poll/intro letter and attaching their logo will be disqualified, to ensure that there is no suggestion that the poll is a collaborative effort.
View the complete rules for the Energy Risk Software Rankings 2011 below:
Complete rules: Energy Risk Software Rankings 2011
The closing date for the poll is the 1st of February 2011.
If you have any questions, please contact me by email: peter.petkov@incisivemedia.com.
Thanks in advance for your help and cooperation.
Peter Petkov
Publisher, Energy Risk
More on Risk management
Energy Risk reaction: Impact of Middle East conflict on hedging and longer term risk
Energy Risk talks to Riccardo Rossi at Centrica Energy and Rob McLeod at Hartree Partners about the impact of the Iran crisis so far on firms exposed to energy
Iran strikes a stress test for CCP margin models
CME’s Span2 and Ice’s IRM2 are performing as advertised. The next few days could test their mettle
Energy Risk Debates: the role of the risk manager
Panellists discuss the different roles of the risk manager, how much standardisation there is across firms and whether the role is ever clear
Interest in battery and flexibility soars in European energy markets
Energy traders are structuring bespoke contracts around Bess and flexibility that facilitate new ways of managing and sharing risk in this nascent market
Interview: Abaxx’s Joe Raia on LNG, Corsia and wind contracts
Abaxx’s Joe Raia talks to Energy Risk at E-World 2026 about the performance of its LNG and Corsia contracts and its latest wind contracts
Axpo interview: the rise of flexibility contracts in European power
Axpo’s Domenico Franceschino talks to Energy Risk about flexibility contracts, battery optimisation and the role of risk management in valuing these bespoke products
Energy firms revisit CTRM systems as tech advances
Energy executives mull how to tap into the explosion of new technologies entering the risk space, but systems selection must consider future business needs, writes Yefreed Ditta at Value Creed
CRO interview: Brett Humphreys
Brett Humphreys is head of risk management at environmental markets specialist Karbone. He talks to Energy Risk about the challenges of modelling outcomes in unpredictable times and how he’s approaching the risks at the top of his risk register