The scramble for oil is globalizing the G-7
The Group of 7 leading industrialized nations is not what it used to be. That was amply demonstrated during the energy scare last year, when the most powerful economies stood impotent in the face of
The Group of 7 leading industrialized nations is not what it used to be. That was amply demonstrated during the energy scare last year, when the most powerful economies stood impotent in the face of
Chinese Petroleum, a state owned Taiwan oil company, has signed an agreement with five partners to invest in a 370 billion Taiwan dollar project to increase production of fuels and chemicals. Four
PetroChina, the largest Chinese oil company, said Tuesday that it planned to spend 27.2 billion yuan expanding the country's largest petrochemical project to meet demand for fuels and raw materials
The uranium enrichement centrifuge plant that gets the most attention these days is in Iran, but a larger one, carefully watched by the civilian nuclear power industry and its opponents, is taking
Two global oil companies have signed deals with the government of Qatar to produce liquefied natural gas, agreements that will result in the construction of plants in the county. Exxon Mobil and
India has joined China in a ravenous thirst for oil that now has the world's two most populous nations bidding up energy prices and racing against each other and against global energy companies in an
Behind President George W. Bush's recent shift in dealing with Iran's nuclear program lies a less visible goal: to essentially rewrite the main treaty governing the spread of nuclear technology,
The United States needs an energy strategy worthy of the enormous energy-related problems it faces, which include global warming, soaring energy costs and dependency on Middle East oil. Opening up
India said that it would resume talks with Pakistan about building a natural gas pipeline from Iran, resisting U.S. opposition. The Indian oil minister, Mani Shankar Aiyar, said that Prime Minister
Midway between Okinawa and China, a Norwegian seismic ship is performing seemingly routine survey work this spring, trawling with long seismic cables and using sound waves to create three-dimensional