Elizabeth Low, Jack Wittels and Chunzi Xu -(Bloomberg) -Via Yahoo News. At any other time in history, the current state of the...
Phillips 66 has announced its intention to lay off approximately 100 employees from the Finance and Procurement sectors based in Bartlesville. Following...
By: AP – U.S. oil field workers and their immediate relatives would be compensated for uninsured medical costs related to air pollution...
Story By Ali Ahmed |Insider Monkey| In this article, we will be covering the top 20 largest refineries in the world. If...
Story From Investing.com | U.S. crude stocks fell almost 6 million barrels last week, losing all that they added the prior week,...
Occidental Petroleum Corp., a major player in the oil industry based in Houston, is set to acquire Canadian clean-tech innovator Carbon Engineering...
By: AP – Children who lived closer to natural gas wells in heavily drilled Pennsylvania were more likely to develop a relatively...
Across the US, Republican-controlled states are seeing major investments in clean energy such as wind and solar. But conservative groups are banning...
(Bloomberg) — Expansion in the US shale patch has come to an end for now with oil output set to shrink for...
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has recently released a comprehensive report indicating a foreseeable deceleration in the growth of oil demand by...
Oil prices fell sharply Monday, setting the stage for U.S. average gasoline prices to potentially drop below $3 per gallon for the first time since 2021, with the U.S. presidential election approaching. According to GasBuddy data, regular unleaded gas averaged $3.08 per gallon Monday afternoon, down nearly 13 cents from a month ago and 40 cents below last year's prices.
With refinery maintenance season nearing its end and global supplies remaining plentiful, OPIS analyst Tom Kloza sees "no real catalyst" for gas prices to rise. CIBC Private Wealth's Rebecca Babin suggests prices should remain stable barring any disruptions from geopolitical or weather events, as long as crude prices stay low.
(Reuters) -Oil prices tumbled 6% on Monday, or more than $4 a barrel, after Saturday's retaliatory strike by Israel against Iran's military bypassed oil and nuclear facilities, not disrupting energy supplies.
Brent futures settled at $71.42 a barrel, down $4.63 or 6.09%. WTI U.S. crude futures finished at $67.38 a barrel, down $4.40 or 6.13%.
Both Brent and U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures hit their lowest since Oct. 1 at the open.
"This is a perfect example of a headline-driven market," said Phil Flynn, senior analyst at Price Futures Group. "We still have a lot of geopolitical risk."
By Jonathan Saul | LONDON (Reuters) – At least 65 oil tankers have dropped...
Langford Energy Partners (LEP), a private oil and gas operator, has announced the purchase...
The Permian Basin continues to dominate the U.S. oil production landscape, while other maturing...
By JENNIFER McDERMOTT | AP | Chris Wright, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for energy secretary, told...
Story by Bloomberg|Mia Gindis | Oil slipped from a five-month high as Hamas and Israel tentatively...
Texas set a series of new milestones in 2024 for its oil and natural...
Story By Sohrab Darabshaw | Via Metal Miner| U.S. President Donald Trump has not...
President Donald Trump wasted no time reversing the country’s energy policies upon taking office,...
Story by Andreas Exarheas| RigZone.com | Donald J. Trump issued a raft of energy orders...
Canada is weighing its options for retaliating against incoming U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposed...
(Bloomberg) — Oil companies declined to bid in a US government auction for drilling...
Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | Canada has drafted a list of U.S. goods worth...
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