
Global Economy and Energy Markets Weekly Commentary – 18th Oct ‘20
Christof Rühl, member of the Advisory Board of Crystol Energy and a Senior Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School and the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University…
Christof Rühl, member of the Advisory Board of Crystol Energy and a Senior Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School and the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University…
In this installment, Dr Carole Nakhle, CEO of Crystol Energy, and Dr Theophilus Acheampong, Senior Consultant at Crystol Energy, analyze whether oil and gas…
In this commentary to the Gulf Intelligence, Dr Carole Nakhle, CEO of Crystol Energy, discusses the latest market developments in global economy and oil industry….
Women in Clean Energy (WICE) – Clean Energy Business Council hosts Dr Carole Nakhle, CEO of Crystol Energy, for a candid conversation on her journey in the energy industry which spans…
Having stalled through June and July, the recovery of the global oil market seemed to reboot in August. The OPEC+ producer alliance stuck to its schedule and relaxed its cuts by 2 million barrels per day…
Nigeria has long been battling structural problems, particularly in its economy and oil sector. The Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent economic shocks only magnified them.
Oil markets seem almost frozen, with prices hovering around $40 per barrel (bbl) in June and July after initially recovering rapidly in May.
Most experts believe the worst is over for oil markets. Prices have gone up from the record lows reached in April.
Nigeria has long been battling structural problems, particularly in its economy and oil sector. The Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent economic shocks only magnified them.
Measures aimed at containing the spread of Covid-19 have caused acute economic pain among major oil-producing countries, as the collapse…
For most of the oil industry’s earlier history its overarching problem was not shortage but too many producers and too much oil. Could it now be heading back into just that situation?
Dr Carole Nakhle Drastic changes in oil prices, like the one we are witnessing today, typically push many host governments to renegotiate contracts with private