Oil is cheaper than it’s been in years. Why aren’t gas prices?
Oil prices have fallen this month to their lowest point in years, but fuel costs haven’t fallen nearly as quickly.
The staff of the Fuel Freedom Foundation, based in Irvine, Calif., curates content for our sections called FFF in the News and What’s the Buzz?
Oil prices have fallen this month to their lowest point in years, but fuel costs haven’t fallen nearly as quickly.
The web is abuzz right now over the EPA’s Clean Power Plan, and rightly so—this is one of the President’s key items under his Climate Action Plan. But did you know that the EPA recently proposed another major climate regulation?
American drivers could soon be partying like it’s 1999.
U.S. producers have recovered only a small fraction of the oil that’s trapped in those rocks, and though the oil-market crash has put the nation’s energy boom on hold, some oil-technology companies are pursuing what they say will be a second American shale revolution.
With West Texas Intermediate crude now below $42 a barrel, the edifice of America’s oil and gas boom is finally crumbling.
In recent weeks, The Hill has published at least six articles that quoted industry-funded front groups attacking the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Clean Power Plan without disclosing the groups’ fossil fuel ties.
The price of oil has collapsed again. And now the oil market is looking at a future that is “unprecedented.”
The U.S. government on Monday gave Royal Dutch Shell a final green light to drill for oil and natural gas in the Arctic Ocean, providing the company a long-sought victory and escalating a battle with environmentalists over President Barack Obama’s climate and energy agenda.
The Obama administration is expected to propose as soon as Tuesday the first-ever federal regulation to cut emissions of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming, by the nation’s oil and natural-gas industry.
The Corn Belt might be where most ethanol gets produced, but the bulk of potential consumers are on the urban coasts. Protec in the East and Propel in California are learning what it takes to drive E85 sales.
Fuel Freedom is a non-profit with a simple mission: break America's oil addiction by bringing competition to the U.S. transportation fuel market.
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