International Energy Agency
Ambushes, Kidnappings, and Dead Cops: Niger Delta Oil Production Hits Historic Low Amid Violence
Multinational oil giants Shell and Chevron have been forced to stall oil production in Nigeria in recent weeks as the uptick in violent attacks on pipelines puts pressure on the country's finances.
This Former UN Climate Chief Is Concerned Paris Agreement Won't Go Far Enough
As negotiators from nearly 200 nations seek to hammer out a global agreement on climate change, Yvo de Boer worries that it may not be enough to boost clean energy investment and hold off dangerous levels of warming.
The US Economy Grew in 2014 — Carbon Pollution, Not So Much
The report highlights the debate over whether nations can grow their economies at the same time as reigning in their greenhouse gas emissions.
Oil Prices Are Plummeting and Nations Are Cutting Subsidies for Fossil Fuels
The International Energy Agency says nations have slashed fossil fuel subsidies by nearly $27 billion, improving market conditions for the development of renewables.
Here's What ExxonMobil Thinks About the Future
As climate change negotiators meet in Lima, Peru and try to hammer out a framework for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, the oil major projects fossil-fueled prosperity in the developing world for decades to come.