In a world where energy drives economies and geopolitical tensions ripple through markets, the global oil landscape stands at a precarious edge, with volatility casting long shadows over stability. The recent decision by OPEC+—the powerful coalition of oil-producing nations—to keep production
I'm thrilled to sit down with Christopher Hailstone, a seasoned expert in energy management and utilities, whose deep understanding of renewable energy and grid reliability offers a unique lens on the complexities of global energy projects. With a career spanning electricity delivery and security,
Fleet managers facing volatile fuel costs, tighter delivery windows, and climate targets are converging on a single, pragmatic question: can one card knit together payments, policy controls, telematics, and EV charging without adding complexity or risk to day-to-day operations while delivering
Nigeria is weighing a bold bet that could reset its energy economy, as Dangote teams with Honeywell in a push to lift refining capacity from 650,000 barrels per day to 1.4 million by 2028 while expanding petrochemicals output to industrial scale and tightening the loop between fuels, plastics, and
Positioning the Market Narrative Investors walked into the week with a simple message from OPEC+: near‑term supply remains steady, but the real action shifts to the mechanics that will define who can produce what by 2027, a pivot that quietly reassigns market power and resets price expectations.
A sudden restart after an air-raid halt sent a clear signal that the Caspian Pipeline Consortium remained operationally steady even as drone risks rose, and that signal mattered because it framed the corridor not as a fragile chokepoint but as an adaptive system where interruptions translated into