Typhoon Forces 25,000 People to Flee Homes in Philippines
The Philippines evacuated almost 25,000 people to safer ground...
The Philippines evacuated almost 25,000 people to safer ground as Typhoon Saola is expected to hit land Wednesday before heading for Taiwan and Hong Kong.
The Philippines has raised the third-highest wind signal over its northeastern islands, warning of strong winds and power disruptions, the state weather bureau Pagasa said in its latest bulletin at 2 p.m. on Tuesday. Taiwan issued a sea warning late Monday and may announce a land warning within hours.
American Airlines was hit with a $4.1 million fine for delays that left passengers stranded on the tarmac....
American Airlines was hit with a $4.1 million fine for delays that left passengers stranded on the tarmac. It’s the largest fine ever issued by the Department of Transportation over this issue.
OpenAI launched ChatGPT Enterprise, the business version of its popular chatbot, as it looks to boost revenue from the product.
3M has agreed to pay $6 billion to settle ~250,000 lawsuits from veterans claiming the company’s earplugs were faulty.
Spanish prosecutors have opened an inquiry into then National Soccer Federation chief Luis Rubiales’s unwanted kiss of national team player Jenni Hermoso after Spain’s World Cup victory. Meanwhile, Rubiales’s mother has shut herself in a church and begun a hunger strike in defense of her son.
Elton John spent a night in the hospital after a fall at his French villa but has since been sent home.
🌀Idalia is expected to hit Florida as a Category 3 hurricane
Evacuations began, schools were closed, and 14 million people were under storm watches yesterday as Idalia,...
Evacuations began, schools were closed, and 14 million people were under storm watches yesterday as Idalia, forecast to grow in strength over the Gulf of Mexico’s warm waters before making landfall tomorrow, headed toward Florida’s west coast. The National Hurricane Center warned of the potential for life-threatening storm surge as the region battered last year by deadly Hurricane Ian prepared. “Buckle up for this one,” Gov. Ron DeSantis, who spoke to the president, warned.
Halliburton loses patent fight over e-frac technology
Halliburton failed to convince a U.S. federal jury on Thursday...
Halliburton failed to convince a U.S. federal jury on Thursday that a unit of rival oilfield services company ProFrac infringed its electric-fracking patents. The jury in Waco, Texas, agreed with ProFrac's U.S. Well Services that the company's "Clean Fleet" technology did not work in the same way as Halliburton's patented technology for electric fracking, or "e-frac," which has a smaller carbon footprint than traditional fracking. ProFrac, a Willow Park, Texas-based oilfield services company backed by billionaires Dan and Farris Wilks, bought Houston-based U.S. Well Services last year.
The jury also determined that two of the three Halliburton patents at issue were invalid, according toReuters.
US Shale Pumps More Cash into Aging Oil Fields, Rystad Says
US independent shale oil producers plowed money into output growth...
US independent shale oil producers plowed money into output growth in the second quarter at the fastest rate in three years,a departure from the fiscal discipline that’s been the industry’s focus, according to a report from research firm Rystad Energy.
The reinvestment rate surged to 72% in the second quarter, highs not seen since 2020, according to the study focusing on 18 companies that collectively account for about 40% of US shale output.
The cash injection comes as the steep drop in output from US shale wells is turning out to be worse than expected, Rystad notes. The depleted fields have forced oil drillers to work even harder to keep production from slipping, research firm Enverus said in a separate study earlier this month.