Quest for cleaner gas must extend to the full value chain
Momentum is growing for responsibly sourced gas as environmental concerns prompt buyers, especially in...
Momentum is growing for responsibly sourced gas as environmental concerns prompt buyers, especially in Europe, to seek cleaner energy alternatives. Nearly 30% of US gas production has been certified as responsibly sourced, but much remains to be done to reduce methane emissions intensity across the entire gas supply chain, including pipelines, liquefied natural gas terminals and gas-fired plants.
⛽️US prepares to close unused East Coast gasoline reserve
Congress is moving forward with a plan to sell the 1-million-barrel Northeast Gasoline Supply Reserve,...
Congress is moving forward with a plan to sell the 1-million-barrel Northeast Gasoline Supply Reserve, established after Hurricane Sandy but never used. The decision comes as East Coast gasoline supplies hover near 10-year seasonal lows.
Trafigura: Price spikes may hit fragile oil market
The oil market...
The oil market faces susceptibility to price spikes due to low inventories and inadequate investments in new oilfields, according to Ben Luckock, co-head of oil trading at Trafigura. Although the fair oil price ranges from $72 to $88 per barrel, Luckock expressed concerns about market complacency, emphasizing risks for higher prices due to prolonged underinvestment and factors such as elevated interest rates.
The workplace is getting older, as the new Rolling Stones album makes 80 look good
For the first time in nearly twenty years, the Rolling Stones...
For the first time in nearly twenty years, the Rolling Stoneswill release a new original album next month. And if the single unveiled yesterday is any indication, rock-and-roll’s OG frontman, Mick Jagger—now an octogenarian—hasn’t missed a beat.
Ronnie Wood, Keith Richards, and Jagger announced their forthcoming album, Hackney Diamonds, yesterday in London along with their new song, “Angry.” At 76, 79, and 80, respectively, the Stones are just one example of how the makeup of the workforce is grayer than you might think:
Last year, 650,000 Americans over 80 were still working, up 18% from the previous decade, according to data from the Census Bureau.
There will be twice as many 75-year-old+ workers in 2030 than in 2020,due in part to the aging baby boomer generation, the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates.
Read: Americans are losing faith in the value of college. Whose fault is that? (...
Read: Americans are losing faith in the value of college. Whose fault is that? (New York Times)
Elon Musk borrowed $1 billion from SpaceX right around the time he bought Twitter, the WSJ reports.
WeWork plans to renegotiate nearly all of its leases and pull out of “unfit and underperforming locations” in an effort to stay afloat.
Demand for mortgages fell to its lowest level since December 1996 last week, despite a slight dip in rates.
Bill Gates, or at least his foundation, bought $95 million worth of Anheuser-Busch stock last quarter even as Bud Light lost its spot as America’s top-selling beer.
Spanish soccer star Jenni Hermoso filed a sexual assault complaint with prosecutors over the unwanted post-victory kiss at the World Cup from now-suspended national soccer federation President Luis Rubiales.