The Department of Energy will provide $2.25 billion in funding over the next five years to support the...
The Department of Energy will provide $2.25 billion in funding over the next five years to support the development of carbon storage technologies and evaluate various carbon capture and storage approaches, as well as potential onshore and offshore storage sites. "The goal here is that at the end of the day, you do actually have commercially available facilities for storage," said DOE Deputy Assistant Secretary for Carbon Management Emily Grubert.
Cheniere Energy posts $3.1B derivatives loss in Q1
Cheniere Energy incurred a $3.1 billion loss on derivatives indexed to international...
Cheniere Energy incurred a $3.1 billion loss on derivatives indexed to international LNG prices it uses to hedge its risk in the first quarter. Cheniere noted that "the long-term duration and international price basis of our [integrated production marketing] agreements make them particularly susceptible to fluctuations in fair market value from period to period."
The Department of Energy will launch a bidding process this fall for the purchase of 60 million barrels of crude oil to replenish about one-third of the 180 million barrels of Strategic Petroleum Reserve crude President Joe Biden pledged to release to address rising energy prices. The SPR repurchase program is also intended to spur domestic production.
Wells Fargo Set Emissions Reduction Targets for Oil, Gas, Power Clients
Wells Fargo & Co. unveiled new targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,...
Wells Fargo & Co. unveiled new targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, including goals to reduce the "absolute emissions" related to its financing of companies in the oil and gas sector, an executive said May 5.
Wells is the latest big U.S. bank to set targets to reduce the emissions it finances through lending, in line with the United Nations-convened Net Zero Banking Alliance.
The details, which follow similar targets from rival bank Citigroup Inc., move the bank toward an overall goal of achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
U.S. stocks end lower Friday, finishing a volatile week in the red
U.S. stock indexes finished lower on Friday, capping a turbulent week on Wall Street...
U.S. stock indexes finished lower on Friday, capping a turbulent week on Wall Street with modest losses after the Federal Reserve moved its policy rate up by a half-percentage point and signaled similar increases were likely at the central bank's next two policy meetings. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.30% shed about 96 points, or 0.3%, ending Friday near 32,901, while recording a 0.2% weekly loss. It marked the Dow's sixth straight weekly loss. The S&P 500 index SPX, -0.57% finished the session 0.6% lower, off 0.2% for the week. The Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -1.40% closed 1.4% lower Friday and down 1.5% for the week. Financial markets have been volatile as investors grow nervous about the Fed's ability to tighten financial conditions to combat inflation at 40-year highs, without derailing the economy. More hawkish tones from the Fed since November have led to rates volatility, but also negative total returns this year on bonds and stocks. The 10-year Treasury rate jumped 23.9 basis points on the week to 3.124%, its highest since Nov. 2018, according to Dow Jones Market Data.