Back to too much oil?
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?
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?
This will be a watershed year in the history of oil markets. Since 2020 began, several unprecedented developments have taken place, from an unparalleled decline
Dr Carole Nakhle Iraq has a major success story in its oil industry. It is one of the very few oil-rich countries in the world
Access for Women in Energy (AccessWIE), in collaboration with IHS Markit, organised an evening seminar on the Future of Oil and Gas Exploration. The event was held at the IHS office in London on 26 February 2020…
Christoff Rühl When Russia walked out on OPEC+ rather than contribute to more output cuts, Saudi Arabia turned on the crude taps. The price collapse
In a survey of experts on matters relating to Middle Eastern and North African politics and security carried out by the Carnegie Middle East Center
Kuwait sits on 102 billion barrels of proven oil reserves – an amount equivalent to 6 percent of the world’s total, placing Kuwait seventh in the
Dr Carole Nakhle In an interview given to Extractives Hub, a joint project between CEPMLP at Dundee University and DFID, Dr Carole Nakhle, CEO of
A few years after the end of the civil war that ravaged the country for 27 years, Angola made world headlines. In the first postwar oil licensing round
Over three consecutive days, Dr Carole Nakhle, CEO of Crystol Energy, was ADIPEC’s 2019 Strategic Conference’s Commentator. The UAE’s flagship annual energy event attracted a record
In this interview given to Naser El Tibi from Al Arabiyya TV channel, and from the halls of ADIPEC in Abu Dhabi, Dr Carole Nakhle,
In a world that is increasingly planning for the post-hydrocarbon age, the United Arab Emirates is heading in the opposite direction as it prepares