Not exact matches
Global oil
supply rose in June as compliance with an OPEC - led deal to freeze production showed signs that it was stalling, the International
Energy Agency (IEA) noted in its latest market report
on Thursday.
On Thursday, the International
Energy Agency (IEA) said
global oil
supply increased in February by 700,000 barrels per day (bpd) from a year ago to 97.9 million barrels per day.
Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are the following: (1) worldwide economic, political, and capital markets conditions and other factors beyond the Company's control, including natural and other disasters or climate change affecting the operations of the Company or its customers and
suppliers; (2) the Company's credit ratings and its cost of capital; (3) competitive conditions and customer preferences; (4) foreign currency exchange rates and fluctuations in those rates; (5) the timing and market acceptance of new product offerings; (6) the availability and cost of purchased components, compounds, raw materials and
energy (including oil and natural gas and their derivatives) due to shortages, increased demand or
supply interruptions (including those caused by natural and other disasters and other events); (7) the impact of acquisitions, strategic alliances, divestitures, and other unusual events resulting from portfolio management actions and other evolving business strategies, and possible organizational restructuring; (8) generating fewer productivity improvements than estimated; (9) unanticipated problems or delays with the phased implementation of a
global enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, or security breaches and other disruptions to the Company's information technology infrastructure; (10) financial market risks that may affect the Company's funding obligations under defined benefit pension and postretirement plans; and (11) legal proceedings, including significant developments that could occur in the legal and regulatory proceedings described in the Company's Annual Report
on Form 10 - K for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, and any subsequent quarterly reports
on Form 10 - Q (the «Reports»).
Meanwhile, the world's nearly 8 billion people and $ 80 trillion economy depend
on hydrocarbons to
supply over 80 % of
global energy; oil fuels 98 % of transportation.
May 2, 2018
Global Energy Metals Releases Part Three in the Visual Capitalist Series
on The Rise of Tesla Highlighting the Reliance
on Sourcing
Supply of Cobalt and other Raw Materials to Meet its Future Vision
Description:
Global Energy Metals (TSX - V: GEMC, OTCQB: GBLEF, FSE: 5GE1) is focused on offering security of supply of cobalt, a critical material to the growing rechargeable battery market, by building a diversified global portfolio of cobalt assets including project stakes, projects, and other supply so
Global Energy Metals (TSX - V: GEMC, OTCQB: GBLEF, FSE: 5GE1) is focused
on offering security of
supply of cobalt, a critical material to the growing rechargeable battery market, by building a diversified
global portfolio of cobalt assets including project stakes, projects, and other supply so
global portfolio of cobalt assets including project stakes, projects, and other
supply sources.
«Any hiccup in U.S. refined product exports is highly disruptive to the
supply chain given the dependency of nations like Mexico and other Latin American countries
on the U.S.,» Michael Tran, director of
global energy strategy at RBC Capital Markets, told Reuters.
US crude oil production shattered a 47 - year output record in November, and then retreated slightly in December, the
Energy Information Administration said
on Wednesday, as oil production from shale continued to upend
global supply patterns.
This sea is also a major shipping route, the disruption of which would interrupt vital
supply lines of
energy, food and other trade with serious impacts
on the regional and
global economies.
That lower baseline
energy demand as well as marginal increases in
supplies has led to lower
global oil and gas prices and more competitive pressure
on the uranium space.
The
global oil stocks surplus is close to evaporating, OPEC said
on Thursday, citing healthy
energy demand and its own
supply cuts while revising up its forecast for production from Continue Reading
I'm somewhat disinclined to believe that the current gold price is due strictly to excess
supply with discussion of price manipulation always looming, but the general thesis remains that until these
global excesses are mopped up, successful commodity investing will involve focus
on a narrow subset of raw materials — in our case the
Energy Metals.
Crude oil prices edged up
on Friday boosted by stronger than expected U.S. economic data though the longer - term outlook for
energy markets remains weak due to a
global oil
supply glut and uncertainty over economic growth prospects in Asia.
Even if China's debt and real estate bubbles don't pop, resulting in a
global recession, slowing economic growth from China could have a detrimental effect
on long - term
energy prices and result in prolonged weakness in the entire
energy sector, including oil services
suppliers such as U.S. Silica.
The section
on economic growth and free trade contains a short paragraph devoted to enhancing
energy security, pledging «to expand the sources and types of
global energy supplied, especially in the Western Hemisphere, Africa, and the Caspian region.»
Diageo Baileys
Global Supply, the Dublin - based international drinks producer, is achieving significant savings
on its
energy bill following its adoption of the new
energy management standard EN 16001.
With oil prices soaring and concerns about
global warming and climate change growing, the pressure is
on to find new ways of managing the current and future
energy supply.
The researchers assessed the impact of diet change
on global water resources over four scenarios, where the meat consumption was gradually reduced while diet recommendations in terms of
energy supply, proteins and fat were followed.
James A. Edmonds • Member, IPCC Steering Committee
on «New Integrated Scenarios» (2006 - present) • Lead Author, Working Group III, «Framing Issues,» IPCC Fourth Assessment Report (2007) • Lead Author, Working Group III, «
Global, Regional, and National Costs and Ancillary Benefits of Mitigation,» IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001) • Lead Author, Working Group III, «Decision - Making Frameworks,» IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001) • Lead Author, Working Group III, Summary for Policy Makers, IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001) • Lead Author, Working Group II, «
Energy Supply Mitigation Options,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) • Lead Author, Working Group II, «Mitigation: Cross-Sectoral and Other Issues,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) • Lead Author, Working Group III, «Estimating the Costs of Mitigating Greenhouse Gases,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) • Lead Author, Working Group III, «A Review of Mitigation Cost Studies,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) • Lead Author, Working Group III, «Integrated Assessment of Climate Change: An Overview and Comparison of Approaches and Results,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) • Lead Author, IPCC Special Report, Climate Change 1994: Radiative Forcing of Climate Change and An Evaluation of the IPCC IS92 Emission Scenarios (1994) • Lead Author, IPCC Special Report, Climate Change 1992: The Supplementary Report to the IPCC Scientific Assessment (1992) • Major contributor, IPCC First Assessment Report, Working Group III, Response Strategies Working Group (1991).
They do particularly pick
on processed meats, but in terms of
global crises: «There is a... tsunami brewing, namely, we are seeing the confluence of growing constraints
on water,
energy, and food [
supplies] combined with the rapid shift toward greater consumption of all animal source foods,» which, they note, are «inefficient, wasteful, and polluting.»
Lewitt focuses
on conventions of support and shelter, of
energy and infrastructure, in the context of the surplus matter that is up - cycled into the built environment: a process by which the material byproducts of
global energy production is itself magically accounted for as a stock of
supplies.
That's one reason I wrote a Science Times article this week describing three books speaking from the middle
on the twin challenges of
supplying energy to a fast - growing
global population and limiting risks from human - driven climate change.
But I think we have to expect that the Paris agreement will evolve as the seriousness of our
global predicament grows
on the public (and
on the corporations and governing bodies that have such an undue influence in
energy supply matters.)
On that front, no one has better articulated the blunt reality of more than doubling the
global energy supply (even with efficiency improvements) while deeply cutting emissions of greenhouse gases than Martin Hoffert of New York University and various colleagues.
Unless R&D can
supply relatively - competitive carbon emission - free
energy on a very large scale,
global emissions will continue upward no matter what the «West» does.
The result is a suite of 160 clean and neat «what if» scenarios, but very little (at least if the summary reflects what's coming in the full 900 - page report at the end of the month)
on how the more aggressive scenarios for cleaning up the
global energy supply might actually be achieved in the real world of competing and conflicting national, corporate and personal interests.
[UPDATE] After visiting various research buildings, he gave a pep talk
on the
energy revolution he said was vital if the United States and the world are to avoid conflicts over limited
supplies of oil and eventual disruptive impacts from human - caused
global warming.
Whatever your feelings about the reality or not of
global warming, should we be investing this sort of money anyway in order to develop alternative sources of
energy needed to keep the lights
on and ensure security of
supply against disruption?
TESTIMONIES Recommendations to Congress for Fundamental Changes in National Water Policy
On December 8, 2011, Pacific Institute President Dr. Peter Gleick testified in Washington, D.C. before the before the Subcommittee on Water and Power of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources — Hearing on Opportunities and Challenges to Address Domestic and Global Water Supply Issue
On December 8, 2011, Pacific Institute President Dr. Peter Gleick testified in Washington, D.C. before the before the Subcommittee
on Water and Power of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources — Hearing on Opportunities and Challenges to Address Domestic and Global Water Supply Issue
on Water and Power of the Senate Committee
on Energy and Natural Resources — Hearing on Opportunities and Challenges to Address Domestic and Global Water Supply Issue
on Energy and Natural Resources — Hearing
on Opportunities and Challenges to Address Domestic and Global Water Supply Issue
on Opportunities and Challenges to Address Domestic and
Global Water
Supply Issues.
The need for immediate short - term action in order to make any significant impact in the longer term has become apparent, as has the need to apply the whole spectrum of policy instruments, since no single instrument will enable a large - scale transition in
energy -
supply systems
on a
global basis.
In most models that show the world reducing emissions enough to hit the 2 °C climate target, «solar
energy emerges only as a minor mitigation option» — around 5 to 17 percent of
global electricity
supply in one representative study used by the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC).
Executive Director meets Norway's Prime Minister Erna Solberg Discussions ranged from Norway's contribution to
global oil
supply security to the country's efforts
on promoting
global access to
energy 27 March 2018
This puts me
on the fence, I thnk
global warming is a minor problem, but I think securing future fossil
energy supplies will become harder and harder over time.
The model uses information
on water demand and availability provided by existing
global integrated assessment models at IIASA, including the Community Water Model (CWATM); the Model for Energy Supply Strategy Alternatives and their General Environmental Impacts (MESSAGE); and the Global Biosphere Management Model (GLOBIOM), and provides information on water resources development, allocation and cost to those m
global integrated assessment models at IIASA, including the Community Water Model (CWATM); the Model for
Energy Supply Strategy Alternatives and their General Environmental Impacts (MESSAGE); and the
Global Biosphere Management Model (GLOBIOM), and provides information on water resources development, allocation and cost to those m
Global Biosphere Management Model (GLOBIOM), and provides information
on water resources development, allocation and cost to those models.
This caused successive British prime ministers to swallow the Very expensive green pill, neglect our
energy supplies, try to assume
global leadership in the debate (Blair) go off
on husky rides (Cameron) or claim there is only a 100 days to save the world (Gordon Brown)
Re-Publish.com Wind power could
supply as much as 20 percent of the world's total electricity by 2030 due to dramatic cost reductions and pledges to curb climate change, the
Global Wind
Energy Council (GWEC) said in a report released in Beijing
on Tuesday.
The Harmony goal, put forward
on behalf of the nuclear industry by World Nuclear Association, is a vision of a future
energy system where nuclear
energy supplies 25 % of
global electricity demand by 2050 as part of a low - carbon generation mix, which would require 1000 GW of new nuclear build.
Business Times Wind power could
supply as much as 20 per cent of the world's total electricity by 2030 due to dramatic cost reductions and pledges to curb climate change, the
Global Wind
Energy Council (GWEC) said in a report released in Beijing
on Tuesday.
Reuters Wind power could
supply as much as 20 percent of the world's total electricity by 2030 due to dramatic cost reductions and pledges to curb climate change, the
Global Wind
Energy Council (GWEC) said in a report released in Beijing
on Tuesday.
Proceedings: Friday 4 May Opening remarks Welcome by Mr, Sefa Sadık AYTEKIN, Deputy Undersecretary, Ministry of
Energy and Natural Resources, Turkey Keynote address by H.E. Thamir GHADHBAN, Chairman of the Prime Minister's Advisory Commission, Iraq Workplan of WEO - 2012 Iraq
Energy Outlook by Dr. Fatih BIROL, Chief Economist, IEA Session 1:
Energy in Iraq — fuelling Iraq's reconstruction and development Chair: Mr. Simon STOLP, World Bank Introductory interventions: H.E. Martin KOBLER, Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary General for Iraq Dr. Usama KARIM, Advisor to the Deputy Prime Minister for
Energy, Iraq Dr. Kamal AL - BASRI, Chairman of the Iraq Institute for Economic Reform Open discussion Session 2: Iraq's electricity sector — short term needs and long - term interests Chair: Mr. Hamish MCNINCH, International Expert Introductory interventions: Dr. Majeed ABDUL - HUSSAIN, Parsons Brinckerhoff Dr. Abdul Qader AHMED, Mass
Global Open discussion Special address: Mr. Tariq SHAFIQ, Managing Director, Petrolog & Associates Session 3: Iraq's oil and gas supply — managing the development of a huge resource Chair: Mr. Tariq SHAFIQ, Managing Director, Petrolog & Associates Dr. Ali AL - MASHAT, Advisor, Prime Minister's Advisory Commission, Iraq Ms. Ruba HUSARI, Managing Director, Iraq Insight Open discussion Session 4: Iraq and international markets — impacts on regional and global balances Chair: H.E. Thamir GHADHBAN, Chairman of the Prime Minister's Advisory Commission, Iraq Introductory interventions: Dr. Mussab AL - DUJAYLI, former Director General, State Oil Marketing Organisation Mr. Jonathan ELKIND, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Department of Energy of the United States Ms. Coby VAN DER LINDE, Director of the Energy Programme, Clingendael Institute, the Netherlands Open discussion Session 5: Summary and conclusions Co-Chairs: H.E. Fareed Yasseen, Ambassador of Iraq to France and H.E. Nick Bridge, Ambassador of the United Kingdom to the OECD Tour de table with recommendations for key topics and areas of study for consideration in the WEO - 2012 Concluding remarks by Dr. Fatih BIROL, Chief Economis
Global Open discussion Special address: Mr. Tariq SHAFIQ, Managing Director, Petrolog & Associates Session 3: Iraq's oil and gas
supply — managing the development of a huge resource Chair: Mr. Tariq SHAFIQ, Managing Director, Petrolog & Associates Dr. Ali AL - MASHAT, Advisor, Prime Minister's Advisory Commission, Iraq Ms. Ruba HUSARI, Managing Director, Iraq Insight Open discussion Session 4: Iraq and international markets — impacts
on regional and
global balances Chair: H.E. Thamir GHADHBAN, Chairman of the Prime Minister's Advisory Commission, Iraq Introductory interventions: Dr. Mussab AL - DUJAYLI, former Director General, State Oil Marketing Organisation Mr. Jonathan ELKIND, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Department of Energy of the United States Ms. Coby VAN DER LINDE, Director of the Energy Programme, Clingendael Institute, the Netherlands Open discussion Session 5: Summary and conclusions Co-Chairs: H.E. Fareed Yasseen, Ambassador of Iraq to France and H.E. Nick Bridge, Ambassador of the United Kingdom to the OECD Tour de table with recommendations for key topics and areas of study for consideration in the WEO - 2012 Concluding remarks by Dr. Fatih BIROL, Chief Economis
global balances Chair: H.E. Thamir GHADHBAN, Chairman of the Prime Minister's Advisory Commission, Iraq Introductory interventions: Dr. Mussab AL - DUJAYLI, former Director General, State Oil Marketing Organisation Mr. Jonathan ELKIND, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Department of
Energy of the United States Ms. Coby VAN DER LINDE, Director of the
Energy Programme, Clingendael Institute, the Netherlands Open discussion Session 5: Summary and conclusions Co-Chairs: H.E. Fareed Yasseen, Ambassador of Iraq to France and H.E. Nick Bridge, Ambassador of the United Kingdom to the OECD Tour de table with recommendations for key topics and areas of study for consideration in the WEO - 2012 Concluding remarks by Dr. Fatih BIROL, Chief Economist, IEA
The Himalayan Times Wind power could
supply as much as 20 percent of the world's total electricity by 2030 due to dramatic cost reductions and pledges to curb climate change, the
Global Wind
Energy Council (GWEC) said in a report released in Beijing
on Tuesday.
sentinelassam.com Wind power could
supply up to 20 per cent of
global electricity by 2030 owing to dramatic cost reductions and efforts to check climate change, said a Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) report released on Tu
global electricity by 2030 owing to dramatic cost reductions and efforts to check climate change, said a
Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) report released on Tu
Global Wind
Energy Council (GWEC) report released
on Tuesday.
The Guardian An upsurge in new wind, solar and hydro plants and capacity saw renewable
energy smash
global records last year, according to a report
on new
supply.
Biofuel production
on abandoned lands could meet 8 % of
global energy needs (6/23/2008) Using abandoned agricultural lands for biofuel production could help meet up to 8 percent of
global energy needs without compromising food
supplies or diminishing biologically - rich habitats, reports a new study published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.
The discussions, which took place in New Delhi
on the 29 - 30 of January, covered
global climate leadership, urban development issues,
supply and demand
energy pathways, and financing for sustainable development.
Allowing solar
energy producers to purchase panels
on the
global market not only reduces prices for those producers, it also furthers the development of efficient
supply chains for solar panel production.
Mabee and Saddler (2007) reviewed a number of regional and
global outlook studies
on forest fibre availability to determine the renewable
global supply of forest biomass for wood
energy production.
Disruptions to
global trade, transport,
energy supplies and labour markets, banking and finance, investment and insurance, would all wreak havoc
on the stability of both developed and developing nations.
In the latest in radical climate doomsaying, a new report warns that fossil fuel consumption will need to be reduced «below a quarter of primary
energy supply by 2100» to avoid possibly disastrous effects
on global temperatures.
In part, it is because our
energy security is dependent
on overseas
supplies and
global stability.