Remember $4-a-gallon gas? Get ready to say ‘ouch’
Remember $4-a-gallon gasoline? It could be coming to a gas station near you, perhaps as soon as Memorial Day weekend.
Remember $4-a-gallon gasoline? It could be coming to a gas station near you, perhaps as soon as Memorial Day weekend.
The tens of thousands of oil and gas wells sprinkled across offshore Asia-Pacific left over from the drilling boom of the 1970s and 1980s will soon need to be decommissioned, a task that could add up to a $100 billion clean-up bill.
In-development gasoline engines could compete with electric powertrains when energy supply chain is taken into account
It’s accepted wisdom among electric-car fans and advocates that within a few years, mass-market car buyers will start snapping up battery-electric cars.
It’s been nearly three years since an oil pipeline ruptured in Santa Barbara County, coating 7 miles of beaches with crude oil and killing dolphins, birds and sea lions.
It may sound counterintuitive, but higher crude oil prices have proved to be a boon for the renewable energy industry, at least when it comes to adoption of clean energy solutions and products—notably electric cars
It’s now abundantly clear that the 2020s will see vastly more cars with plugs on the world’s roads than we have today.
Every year, the clean energy experts at Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) predict what will happen in the sector in the year ahead. This year’s predictions have landed
Harley-Davidson, an old-guard motorcycle brand that has had plenty of success monetizing its heritage and appealing to traditionalists, is about to enter the electric age.
Motorists in California, the state with the most expensive gasoline, could see pump prices that begin with a 4 again as oil markets rally.