The war in Iran has shocked global energy markets, but it’s also putting precious water resources in the Gulf region under threat.
The Iran war could create a global scramble for energy security. Here's how a Morgan Stanley exec says her team is ...
World leaders, government ministers and heads of industry, international organizations and international financial institutions gathered in Paris this week for the 2026 Nuclear Energy Summit, ...
There’s a growing interest in mining the ocean seabed for minerals essential to technology. But whose minerals are they? A ...
In a structurally shifting regime, investors need to think beyond traditional 60/40 allocations to include real assets as a source of resilience. Read more here.
As countries scramble to secure oil, gas and fertilizer, China’s bets on clean energy and coal are cushioning its dependence on oil and gas imports.
And in the process, nations can protect themselves from relying on a rickety energy supply system anchored in an exceptionally unstable part of the world, not least because the global hegemon has a ...
One of the biggest surprises following the US-Israel attacks on Iran was how quickly Iran targeted Persian Gulf energy infrastructure. In the early hours of the fighting, energy analysts were ...
With war in the Middle East raging, oil prices are soaring. To temper the costs, the United States government is turning to oil stored in massive salt caverns.
Energy expert Michael E. Webber explains why the United States can weather rising Middle East tensions and global oil market instability amid our war with Iran.
Drivers of gas-powered vehicles are much more vulnerable to fluctuating prices that result from global conflict than those who charge their cars.
Oil and gasoline prices are rising as the war in Iran intensifies and other global conflicts affect supply. That means pain ...