RUSSIA-Ukraine Conflict, 2014-TRADE regulationINTERNATIONAL competitionENERGY consumptionThis article examines the impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on the trade of oil, specifically focusing on changes in Russian oil exports and its main partners. It highlights the use of trade rest...
“Net zero by 2050 is too little, too late,” Raman points out. “The developed world should have gotten to real zero by now. And because of the war in Ukraine, they’ve even backtracked to increasing their use of fossil fuel, with Germany for instance turning back to coal.” Alberto...
Photo: Nuclear nightmare: In the days following the Chernobyl nuclear power explosion in the Ukraine in 1986, a cloud of radioactive "fallout" spread throughout Europe. In this sequence of pictures, you can see the cloud (the pink area) on day 2, day 6, and day 10 after the accident....
Q: If we're producing so much oil, why did the Ukraine war cause such an immediate spike in gas prices? A: Crude oil and transportation fuels are traded in global markets. The U.S. allows its producers and consumers to buy and sell oil and petroleum in these global markets. This mean...
Ukraine prepares for war in case of Russian land grab02:47 disputes over gas prices created shortages In response, the EU has attempted to come up with alternatives to its current dependency on Russian oil and gas. The so-called"Nabucco" pipeline, for example, was a plan to bypass Russia ...
According to Bain, Alrosa lowered production at Botuobinskaya, Almazy, Anabara and Jubilee, as well as a number of smaller mines. (Alrosa did not provide comment for this story in light of Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine.)
We turn any talk about the Olympics or Ukraine toward our political prisoners,” she continued. “And they don’t hear us.” She thinks she understands why. It’s “not by any fault of their own, but because it’s our domestic political problem.” But maybe the real reason lies deeper...