32mon MSN
‘Cushion the shock’: IEA releases 10 quick fuel-saving tips – many countries are already doing them
"Today’s report provides immediate and concrete measures... to shelter consumers from the impacts of this crisis," says IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol. View on euronews ...
Even the Biden administration repeatedly attempted to give Trump the good ol’ boy treatment for keeping stolen classified documents in his bathroom in Mar-a-Lago (which, to be fair, Biden had stashed ...
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news ...
Iran launched strikes on key Gulf infrastructure Thursday in retaliation for an Israeli attack on a natural gas field that supplies most of the country’s natural gas. The tit-for-tat attacks have ...
COVID, post-strikes production slowdown weren’t enough, Hollywood is now facing another significant threat: higher fuel costs, due to the worsening conflict with Iran and uncertainty over the Strait ...
21hon MSN
The day oil stopped: Inside the biggest energy supply shock since 1973 - and who's paying the price
The Strait of Hormuz, a passage barely 33 miles wide between Iran and Oman, normally carries about 20 million barrels of oil per day.
Eni expects its oil and gas production to grow by between 3% and 4% per annum through 2030, underpinned by a project portfolio that chief executive Claudio Descalzi described as t ...
Iran intensified its attacks on its Gulf Arab neighbors’ energy sites Thursday, hitting a Saudi refinery on the Red Sea and setting Qatari liquefied natural gas facilities and two Kuwaiti oil ...
The U.S. and Israel’s war with Iran has thrust the Strait of Hormuz into the crosshairs of yet another geopolitical conflict.
Tennessee farmer Todd Littleton expects to pay $100,000 more for fertilizer this season, a 40% spike from his bill last year thanks to the war in Iran — and he is scrambling to cover that extra cost.
Rising tensions between the United States, Israel and Iran have sent oil prices surging. While households and governments face higher costs, parts of the fossil fuel industry stand to gain billions.
Six CFR fellows assess the geoeconomic fallout of the war in Iran, and they analyze the challenges that the United States and the world will have to navigate as the conflict enters its third week.
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