Has the U.S. really reached an epic turning point in energy?
The United States is setting new milestones that suggest a fundamental, and possibly permanent, shift in its energy economy.
The United States is setting new milestones that suggest a fundamental, and possibly permanent, shift in its energy economy.
With oil hovering at $30 a barrel and gasoline below $2 a gallon, the pleasure of lower fuel prices is turning painful for more of the U.S. economy.
Oil production from two key shale fields in Texas and North Dakota is on the decline, according to analytics firm Platts Bentek.
This year will be another hard one for the oil majors as they cut spending.
Warning: Watch your mouth when you talk about Tesla online. If you say the wrong thing, Elon Musk could bring down the hammer and block you from buying one of his precious electric cars.
Ask almost anyone in the oil business, and they will say a bust is always followed by another boom. But what if the industry has only one big cycle left?
Chasing Tesla and General Motors, Ford hopes a $4.5 billion investment will help it leapfrog to the front the pack when it comes to developing electrified cars.
The Auto Channel received confirmation today from Urban Air Initiative and RFA (Renewable Fuels Association) that the latest model MINI hard top is approved by MINI and BMW to run on E25 fuel – 25% ethanol blended with gasoline.
Chevron Corp. had its credit rating cut by Standard & Poor’s for the first time in almost three decades, the largest U.S. oil driller to face a downgrade so far amid the worst oil-market collapse in a generation. Exxon Mobil Corp. may be next.
At times like this it helps to turn to a reliable bull. So last week I paid a visit to Harold Hamm at the Oklahoma City headquarters of his Continental Resources.