By Tim Bradner For the Frontiersman | Alaska wage and salary employment was up 2% in July, continuing a steady trend of...
Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | Oil stocks went back in vogue two years ago with a vengeance as investors sought to take...
Mark Jaffe | The Colorado Sun| A proposed draft of rules to manage the cumulative impacts of oil and gas drilling is...
StoryBy Jennifer Pallanich |Journal of Petroleum Technology |Across the US, the number of college students pursuing petroleum engineering degrees has been dropping, leaving...
by Rachel Frazin | The Hill |The Biden administration announced on Tuesday it was protecting 28 million acres of public lands in Alaska, reversing a...
China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), Asia’s largest oil producer, is reassessing its global strategy with an eye on reviving its dealmaking activities....
By Mitchell Ferman|Bloomberg| About 100 miles east of UFO-capital Roswell, a dusty corner of New Mexico with more cattle than people quietly buttresses...
New Zealand announced on Monday that it will pass new legislation by the end of this year to reverse a ban on...
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com | As OPEC+ gears up for its next meeting, the group finds itself at a crossroads that...
Story By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square – Texas’ oil and natural gas production reached new record highs in July, after...
The number of people who applied for unemployment benefits in the first week of the new year fell to an 11-month low, the latest sign layoffs remain extremely low even as businesses cut back on hiring.
New jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs, fell by 10,000 to 201,000 in seven days ended Jan. 4, the government said. The report was moved up a day because of former President Jimmy Carter’s funeral on Thursday.
The labor market is in an odd state — most companies are hesitant to hire but very few are laying off workers. It’s what one economist calls the “no hire/no fire” economy.
Right now businesses are waiting to see how President-Elect Donald Trump’s economic policies pan out before they decide their next step.
Terrifying scenes played out across Southern California early Wednesday as fierce winds of nearly 100 miles per hour propelled multiple wildfires that laid waste to homes and businesses, covered cities and highways in smoke, whipped up storms of embers and turned the skies red.
Officials have tallied devastating losses but warned that the worst was still to come, with wild winds expected to fuel the out-of-control blazes and hinder firefighting efforts well into Wednesday.
by Andreas Exarheas|RigZone.com| In a market update sent to Rigzone by the Rystad Energy...
By Sheila Dang -HOUSTON | REUTERS—U.S. oil major Chevron told Reuters that it plans...
A long-overlooked shale play in South Texas might finally be showing signs of promise,...
In the wake of President Donald Trump’s re-election in November 2024, his administration swiftly...
Chevron Corporation has announced plans to lay off approximately 600 employees at its former...
Over the past two decades, the U.S. shale revolution has dramatically transformed the global...
As oil prices sink to their lowest levels in four years and the risk...
(UPI) — The Department of Interior on Thursday released an analysis of fossil fuel...
by Andreas Exarheas|RigZone.com|Where next for oil prices? That’s the question Stratas Advisors looked at in...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | Oil prices have been on the mend this...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | The average price of India’s crude oil imports...
On April 8, 2025, the Keystone Pipeline experienced a significant rupture near Fort Ransom,...
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