NEW DELHI, March 19 (Reuters) - Russia will continue to supply energy at market prices without taking sanctions into considerations, Pavel Sorokin, its deputy energy minister, said on Thursday.
Neelkanth Mishra, Chief Economist at Axis Bank, said the Iran conflict has disrupted about 7 percent of global energy supply, ...
Japanese companies, from ​steel producers to chemical firms and even sento baths, are feeling the heat from reduced Middle ...
Russia will keep supplying energy at market prices despite sanctions. The U.S. issues a 30-day oil waiver to stabilize markets amid Iran war disruptions.
For this week's One Big Question feature, we ask business leaders how increasing fuel and energy costs have been affecting their bottom lines.
The Israeli strikes on the South Pars gas field, a crucial energy asset shared with Qatar, have significantly escalated ...
The White House said Trump would waive, for 60 days, Jones Act requirements for goods shipped between U.S. ports to be moved ...
Connecticut consumers say they are cutting expenses where they can as what they pay for home heating oil escalates ...
Attacks on South Pars and Ras Laffan, and Donald Trump’s threat to “massively blow up” the world’s largest gasfield, all hit markets ...
Companies like Adani Green, Jindal Power, JSW Energy, and Adani Power Ltd are currently leading the pack in the Day-Ahead ...
Global oil and natural gas prices have soared after Iran attacked a key natural gas facility in Qatar that can supply ...
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz did not create Bangladesh’s energy vulnerability – it exposed it. As fuel shortages, remittance risks and policy gaps converge, the crisis reveals how years of inac ...