All Environment
- Departure of Chesapeake CEO McClendon signals new era in natural gasIf the change at Chesapeake is any indication, the natural gas industry is going to be far more buttoned-down as it pares debt and boosts operating profit.
- Tornado threat: How are January tornadoes possible?A tornado threat was posted Tuesday. Tornadoes are unusual in winter, but a large swath of the country was under a tornado watch, with some areas facing a tornado warning.
- Tornado threat: How are January tornadoes possible?A tornado threat was posted Tuesday. Tornadoes are unusual in winter, but a large swath of the country was under a tornado watch, with some areas facing a tornado warning.
- Mississippi River oil spill: why Yazoo turn is treacherousA Mississippi River barge that crashed Sunday is still leaking oil. The accident occurred at one of the two most difficult turns on the river.
- Mississippi River oil spill: why Yazoo turn is treacherousA Mississippi River barge that crashed Sunday is still leaking oil. The accident occurred at one of the two most difficult turns on the river.
- A123 purchase by Chinese firm approved by US. Are energy secrets safe?The acquisition of A123 Systems Inc. by China-based Wanxiang Group Corp. passed its last official hurdle with the authorization by the US聽government. The approval comes despite concerns that the A123 Systems deal would expose sensitive energy technology to聽Chinese authorities.
- Exxon Mobil passes Apple to again become world's largest companyApple first overtook Exxon Mobil as the world鈥檚 largest publically traded company in August 2011, Peixe writes, but after several difficult weeks, Apple will hand the mantle back to Exxon Mobil.
- Boeing 787 batteries clear first test. Focus shifts to monitoring system.Boeing 787 batteries seemingly passed first inspections this week as US and Japanese officials came up with few answers in their cursory examinations of the Boeing 787's battery fires. The company's outsourcing strategy and a weak permitting process may have contributed to the Boeing 787's glitches.
- Boeing 787 batteries clear first test. Focus shifts to monitoring system.Boeing 787 batteries seemingly passed first inspections this week as US and Japanese officials came up with few answers in their cursory examinations of the Boeing 787's battery fires. The company's outsourcing strategy and a weak permitting process may have contributed to the Boeing 787's glitches.
- Northern winter not as cold as expected? It could be urban 'waste heat'Waste heat has a smaller impact on global climate than does CO2, but heat from highly urbanized northern regions appears to explain observed deviations from climate forecasts, a study says.
- Dow Chemical withdraws from natural gas export projectDow Chemical publicly disavowed聽a $6.5 billion project for a natural gas export terminal that it partly owns, Alic writes.听Dow is opposed to this project because its senior management believes high volumes of LNG exports will lead to higher prices at home.
- Why the premium for Brent oil won't lastSome 1.1 million barrels per day of pipeline capacity will alleviate the glut of West Texas Intermediate and allow it to supply higher-priced markets.
- Energy literacy: visualizing the impacts of unlimited growthHumans have already amply demonstrated the resource limitations of unbridled economic growth by not anticipating and then not addressing the myriad critical environmental and resource problems we face today, Cobb writes.
- 2 barges damaged in bridge crash, oil spill2 barges in bridge crash cause oil spill that closes Mississippi River for 16 miles. Investigators not sure whether 1 or 2 barges hit the bridge; only one appears to be leaking oil.
- New York's heat may be warming SiberiaHeat from northern cities from New York to Tokyo could warm winters in Canada and Siberia, according to a new study, but cool the fall in the western US and Eastern Europe.
- Chevron explores Morocco oil, undeterred by Algeria crisisChevron has signed agreements with Morocco officials that give the US company rights to explore for oil in three offshore sites, Alic writes. Chevron and聽other oil majors are hardly shaken by recent events in the North African Sahel, she adds, including the Algeria hostage crisis.
- Should colleges divest from coal, oil?Students at college campuses are calling on administrators to divest from fossil fuels in an effort to curb the effects of climate change. But schools are wary of doing away with some of their most profitable assets.
- Why secretary of State permits pipelines 鈥 and other anachronismsA patchwork of federal agencies oversees permits for various energy projects: from LNG exports to cross-state pipelines. Keystone XL pipeline decision hinges on Secretary of State, which has little experience with business permits.
- Arctic air invasion captured in animationArctic air has driven down temperatures in most of the continental US. A new video animation from NOAA shows the arctic air swirling into the country and predicts its path.
- John Kerry: Global climate change is threat to USJohn Kerry said the US should pursue policies to boost clean energy and slow the effects of climate change in his confirmation hearing Thursday. Climate change has been a focus of John Kerry's career in the Senate.