Kremlin prepares to seize Yukos’s oil
The battle for control of Yukos, the Russian oil giant, has taken a fresh twist after it emerged that the country’s authorities have drawn up secret plans to seize control of the group’s oil.
The battle for control of Yukos, the Russian oil giant, has taken a fresh twist after it emerged that the country’s authorities have drawn up secret plans to seize control of the group’s oil.
Darfur, the international community unanimously agrees, is “the worst humanitarian crisis of our time”.
Low-level tensions between Canada and the United States over sovereignty of an offshore sliver in the Beaufort Sea are moving from simmer to boil.
“I believe Humanity must grow accustomed to living with an expensive oil, to treat hydrocarbons as a non-renewable resource and to look for alternative energy sources. It seems that oil is not going to get cheaper.”
Online video of two panel discussions exploring "How Stable Is the House of Saud?" and "An Impending Energy Crisis?"
British Petroleums latest statistical review of energy reserves and consumption shows a glaring discrepancy compared to last year – the magical appearance of an additional 100 billion barrels of oil!
The Saudi officials’ announcement that they were satisfied with the current level of world oil prices may constitute an implicit fait accompli, an acceptance of their inability to increase production substantially beyond current levels, bringing the days of peak oil production ominously closer.
Review of Paul Robert’s book The End of Oil.
The Philippines called on China on Saturday to “desist” from provocative actions in the disputed Spratly islands region after reports a Chinese company was exploring for oil and gas near the area.
Michael C. Lynch, the most vocal critic of Colin Campbell and other oil depletion ‘pessimists,’ tries to point out that within this debate we are dealing with a lot of assumptions and many unknowns.
Those of you who were driving in the US in 1972-73 will vouch for the rapid changes that occurred across the board due to the decline of US oil output.
Britain came within an ace of becoming a net oil importer for the first time in 13 years in May, helping the country’s trade deficit widen unexpectedly to £3.4 billion.