Democrats' blueprint for action on climate change

A new report from Democrats on the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis calls for comprehensive actions by...

Building coalitions for energy stimulus

Governments around the world are consumed now with the challenge of responding effectively to the coronavirus pandemic, including providing...

On climate, Denmark looks past its size to address crisis

It’s a small country with big ambitions when it comes to climate change. The new government in Denmark plans...

Coal communities face fiscal ruin

The coal industry continues to tumble in the U.S. as electric power plants turn increasingly to natural gas and...

Whither the Green New Deal?

There’s a lot of speculation and disagreement over the Green New Deal and what it means for U.S. policies...
Podcast
Democrats' blueprint for action on climate change
Podcast
Building coalitions for energy stimulus
Climate, Environment, Podcast
On climate, Denmark looks past its size to address crisis
Podcast
Coal communities face fiscal ruin
Watch
Whither the Green New Deal?

About Bill Loveless

An award-winning energy journalist known for his compelling news interviews in print and on the air. A thought-provoking moderator of high-level public events addressing leading energy and environmental issues. An insider with extensive connections with prominent lawmakers, policymakers and business executives. A perceptive writer providing critical insight on issues.

Energy, Government and Politics, International, Podcast

Columbia Energy Exchange podcast: Outlook for Russian oil, gas

On this episode of Columbia Energy Exchange, Tatiana Mitrova, Head of the Oil and Gas Department at The Energy Research Institute in the Russian Academy of Sciences, discussed Russia’s energy outlook with host Bill Loveless. Their conversation touched on topics ranging from the impact of the oil price drop on Russia’s budget and investment strategy, to the role of sanctions in the domestic economy, to the response of Gazprom to changing global natural gas markets, among others. (Listen Here)

Continue reading
Article, Economy / Finance, Government and Politics

8 states take a big budget hit due to falling oil prices

It’s no surprise that the slump in oil prices, now 20 months old, is taking its toll on states that are particularly dependent on oil production to balance their budgets. But the impact is becoming clearer than ever, especially when you factor in steep declines in natural gas and coal prices over the same period. A new report from the Rockefeller Institute of Government at the State University of New York suggests growing trouble for the eight states where oil, gas and mining account for 10% or more of gross domestic product. (Read More)

Continue reading
Article, Consumer, Corporations, Economy / Finance, Energy

Oil sector may see spurt in M&A activity

Shareholders for the British-based BG Group paved the way for the biggest energy merger in more than five years the other day when they approved the acquisition of their oil and gas company by Royal Dutch Shell for $50 billion. When Shell announced plans for the takeover last April, the proposed deal was widely seen as a possible harbinger of mergers and acquisitions across the industry. But aside from an earlier and still pending bid by the oil service provider Halliburton to buy one of its rivals, Baker Hughes, for $35 billion, no such trend has emerged, despite the plunge in oil prices that has taken place over the last 18 months and its devastating impact on many companies. (Read More)

Continue reading
Article, Consumer, Energy, Utilities and Providers

Huh? Utilities spur power savings, see profits

For nearly 125 years, electric utilities have operated according to one basic business principle: the more power they sell, the more money they make. But the industry founded by Thomas Edison in 1882 now faces the potential for the kinds of upheaval that have transformed telecommunications, transportation, TV programming and other industries. Will the utility as we know it disappear? (Read more)

Continue reading
Corporations, Energy, Podcast, Utilities and Providers

Columbia Energy Exchange: Nick Akins, CEO, American Electric Power

Responding to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan is just one of the major tasks for U.S. electric utilities in 2016. New technologies and customer expectations, not to mention shareholder demands, are presenting new challenges and opportunities for the nation’s utility executives. In this episode of the Columbia Energy Exchange, a podcast at the Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy, host Bill Loveless interviews Nick Akins, the chairman, president and CEO of American Electric Power, one of the largest investor-owned utilities in the U.S., and the chairman of the Edison Electric Institute. (Listen Here)

Continue reading
Article, Consumer, Economy / Finance, Policy, Regulations, Utilities and Providers

2016: Another volatile year for energy

The year 2016 promises to be an eventful one for energy in the U.S. and nations throughout the world, with more turbulence in oil and natural gas markets, new opportunities for solar, wind and other forms of renewable energy, and increasing challenges for the electric grid. The extraordinary slump in oil and natural gas prices is likely to continue this year, with both good and bad implications, depending on which side of the pump is important to you. For consumers, low prices will mean more savings when they fuel their vehicles and homes. But for oil and gas producers, and the entire industry that supports their operations, low prices will dampen the resurgence of U.S. production and lead to more layoffs, bankruptcies and mergers. How extensive is the toll of the price decline on the U.S. shale revolution? How quickly…

Continue reading
Article, Energy, Policy, Regulations, Utilities and Providers

Why this Ohio utility lauds carbon controls

The year 2016 will be a crucial one for electric utilities as they prepare to meet new Environmental Protection Agency regulations requiring them to cut their carbon emissions more than ever. Among the milestones in EPA’s Clean Power Plan, which the agency issued last year, is a requirement for states to submit plans by September to comply with the policy’s requirement to reduce emissions by 32% by 2030, compared with 2005 levels. Utilities will play a big part in the development of those plans. (Read more)

Continue reading
Article, Economy / Finance, Energy, Government and Politics

‘Worst is over’ on oil plunge, CEO says

When it comes to putting the best foot forward in difficult times, Harold Hamm does so as surely as anyone in the U.S. oil industry. Since oil prices began spiraling down last year, the CEO of Continental Resources has predicted a recovery sooner than many analysts would venture, and he’s sticking to that point of view even now as the cost of a barrel of crude has sunk to 12-year lows. “The worst is over, I believe,” Hamm said the other day as oil markets struggled to take account of the escalation in tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran and turmoil in the Chinese economy. (Read more)

Continue reading
Article, Consumer, Corporations, Economy / Finance, Energy, Government and Politics, Utilities and Providers

Cheap gas, oil craters: 2015 rocked energy sector

The year 2015 has been a tumultuous one for energy throughout the world, including in the U.S. A new era of abundant supplies is emerging here, bringing with it low prices, at least for now. All this comes as the U.S. and other nations take stock of climate change, and the role that producing and using energy plays in the phenomenon. With that in mind, here’s a look back at 10 big developments in energy in the U.S. in 2015. (Read More)

Continue reading
Article, Consumer, Energy, Technology, Utilities and Providers

Internet of Things puts energy grid to test

Electric grids in the U.S. and other countries face more challenges than ever when it comes to providing power reliably and affordability. Aging infrastructure, increasing environmental requirements and the influx of solar and other forms of renewable energy all make running an electric utility smoothly increasingly difficult. Add to that test the explosion of data and the need to generate, store and process it on a real-time basis. (Read More)

Continue reading

Popular posts

Dude! Oil industry in 'hang 10' mode on low prices

North Dakota is about as far from an ocean and surfing as any place in the U.S. So why would a North Dakota energy official use a popular surfing...