CUT complies with HSE improvement order
Aberdeen-based Cutting Underwater Technologies (CUT) has complied with an improvement notice from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).
Aberdeen-based Cutting Underwater Technologies (CUT) has complied with an improvement notice from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).
US energy storage firm Powin Energy has announced the recruitment of a new chief financial officer and vice president of business development.
Saudi Arabia’s energy minister said today that talk of extending the agreement on oil output reductions would be premature, according to a news report.
Groundbreaking new kit developed by Aberdeen-based engineer EC-OG has been powered up for the first time off Orkney.
Small- to mid-cap exploration and production (E&P) companies are “out of the emergency room” after a tough 2016, but haven’t been discharged yet, an analyst said.
Orkney-based Scotrenewables Tidal Power has hailed its giant turbine for “resetting the bar” on costs as the device hit peak power.
The $3.8billion Dakota Access Pipeline will start interstate crude deliveries next month, a news report said.
Belarus has settled its $726million debt for gas supplied by Gazprom in 2016-17, the Russian energy giant said.
The last recorded words of the ill-fated crew of an Irish Coast Guard helicopter which crashed in the Atlantic were “we’re gone”.
Canadian firm Husky Energy has inked a production sharing deal for a block off the coast of China.
International lenders have backed an ambitious deal to hand North Sea assets to new entrants.
Large-scale infrastructure works ahead of a £375million expansion of Aberdeen harbour are expected to be approved by the city council next week.
The number of rigs operating in the US went up this week, the latest Baker Hughes rig count shows.
Energy Voice’s readers have spoken – and most of them do not want an independent Scotland.
Schlumberger has signed a deal with Argentina’s YPF to start a shale oil pilot project in the South American country.
Nigeria’s military crusade to rid the country of hundreds of illegal refineries led to the death of two soldiers yesterday, a news report said.
An extension to international production cuts would encourage the rival US shale sector, as it could fill the shortfall, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said today.
Shell hired about 800 graduates worldwide last year, with two-fifths coming from universities outside Europe and the Americas, the firm said.
ConocoPhillips said today it had agreed to sell its interests in the San Juan Basin in the US south-west for $3billion.
Gulf Keystone Petroleum (GKP) said today that it had banked a £9.5million payment from Kurdistan.
Operators will spend nearly £30billion on new North Sea projects over the next three years, with Norway's Statoil leading the way, a new report said.
Nord Stream 2 has booked three Allseas vessels for a major pipelay job in the Baltic Sea.
A deepwater oil spill in the north-east Atlantic could be more complex and difficult to combat than the Deepwater Horizon incident, according to new research.
Dozens of people from around the globe have contacted the Press and Journal since we reported on Calum Melville’s bankruptcy.
If insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results, then sanity must be the reasonable expectation that repeat actions have repeat effects. What happens then, when long observed causal relationships break down? When an impressively broad OPEC and non-OPEC production cut doesn’t send prices soaring?