HOUSTON, (Reuters) – Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) and Shell Plc (SHEL.L) on Thursday confirmed the sale of their California oil joint-venture Aera to German asset manager...
G7 finance ministers are set to meet on Friday to thrash out a US-led plan to cap Russian crude oil prices. Officials...
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Ravil Maganov, the chairman of Russia’s second-largest oil producer Lukoil, died on Thursday after falling from a hospital window in...
Oil futures ended lower for the third month in a row in August to tally their longest streak of monthly losses in...
By: Cathy Bussewitz – AP – As winter nears, European nations, desperate to replace the natural gas they once bought from Russia,...
HART ENERGY: The Permian Basin’s economic impact on Texas and the nation is growing—thanks to both its natural and renewable energy resources....
From The New York Times. California made history late last week when its regulators approved an ambitious plan to phase out the...
By: Associated Press – A team from the U.N. nuclear watchdog on Monday started its journey to the Zaporizhzhia atomic power plant...
OilPrice.com. Oil and gas supermajors are on course to repurchase their shares at near-record levels this year thanks to soaring oil and...
(Bloomberg) — Progress toward an Iranian nuclear deal has thrown the spotlight onto a sizeable cache of crude held by Tehran that...
(Reuters) Excelerate Energy Inc (EE) jumped 17.5% in its market debut on Wednesday, riding on investor demand for companies with exposure to liquefied natural gas (LNG) amid the Russia-Ukraine conflict and ending a lull in U.S. capital markets since the invasion. By the close of the market Thursday, it was up $1.15 closing at $28.00 per share.
The company is a provider of floating LNG terminals and owned by Oklahoma-based energy tycoon George Kaiser. Excelerate is also the first LNG-related IPO in the United States since 2019, indicating a reversal in fortunes for fossil fuel companies as crude oil and natural gas prices bounced back from pandemic lows.
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration announced on Friday that it would resume selling leases for new oil and gas drilling on public lands, but would also raise the federal royalties that companies must pay to drill, which would be the first increase in those fees in more than a century.
The Interior Department said in a statement that it planned to open up 145,000 acres of public lands in nine states to oil and gas leasing next week, the first new fossil fuel permits to be offered on public lands since President Biden took office.
Bill Armstrong isn’t following the industry playbook. As U.S. shale producers consolidate and shrink...
Haynesville Gas Takeaway Grows With Leg Pipeline Launch (P&GJ) — Williams Companies has placed its...
The newly unveiled U.S.–EU energy framework, announced during the July 27–28 summit in Brussels,...
by Andreas Exarheas| RIGZONE.COM | Chevron will “consolidate or eliminate some positions” as part of...
Presidio Petroleum is preparing to enter the public markets through a strategic merger with...
Trying to catch up in oil and gas production is difficult enough. It becomes...
By Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com | The United States electric vehicle industry is facing...
Author Mark Davidson, Washington|Editor–Everett Wheeler|Energy Intelligence Group| The number of active US gas rigs...
(Reuters) – U.S. gasoline demand in May fell to the lowest for that month...
Hart Energy, via Yahoo News | Occidental Petroleum [OXY • NYSE] is selling off...
by Bloomberg, via RigZone.com|Weilun Soon, Rakesh Sharma, Reporting| At least four tankers discharged millions...
Fossil fuel financing by Wall Street’s leading banks has declined sharply in 2025, highlighting...
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