Why Northwest Doctors Oppose Oil-by-Rail Development
This article explores how the next generation of oil and gas employees will change the face of the industry.
The demand for this metal is expected to skyrocket.
Industry officials discuss what oil and gas companies are looking for in terms of Internet of Things technologies.
The energy giant is shifting to gas as the industry adapts to climate change.
Self-driving cars will be electric because of cost. And the cost will be so low, oil will not survive.
The North Sea oil and gas market is enduring a myriad of challenges. One of these is the unfortunate process employees facing redundancy, some of whom have worked for their employer for several years. Read our top 5 tips when facing redundancy.
Industry insiders discuss the skill sets that oil and gas companies will need as they move towards digitalization.
Increased automation in oil and gas will change the landscape of employment opportunities, but that doesn't necessarily mean workers will lose out.
Markets have been waiting for U.S. energy producers to slash output during a period of depressed crude prices. But these companies have been paying their top executives to keep the oil flowing.
Oil prices have fallen recently but Marathon Oil has shown that it can generate decent profits and strong free cash flows even in a weak oil price environment.
The U.S. oil industry has been struggling for more than a year now, and if the price of oil doesn't go up a bit or at least stabilize, the whole situation will likely go from bad to worse. That's pretty much the only thing that industry analysts are certain of...
The dominant assumptions regarding the transition of oil and gas companies are wrong. The evidence suggests it is far more likely they will fail, because they will not cope with the speed of change…
Oil prices are experiencing an uptick, but investment experts warn it may not last.
Oil exploration companies might shudder at the idea that continuing low prices could help them in the long run, but some argue that it would be...
U.S. oil boom, coupled with new technologies and changing consumer habits, have shaken up how we consider energy
The conventional wisdom about steadily rising demand has it all wrong. Within two decades, global oil use will start to decline.
The U.S. continues to promote and extract domestic oil and gas, even when the market is flooded with this product. Why? Because the collective “we” demands it.
The biggest U.S. banks can weather even severe defaults by oil companies.
U.S. oil production in the Permian has caused its own set of problems.
Many pundits still have an ultra-bearish view on oil, but many of them fail to see that demand and supply could be balancing much faster than anticipated