The global LNG market is not currently tight, Gunvor Chairman Torbjörn Törnqvist said at CERAWeek, contradicting the view shared earlier in the day by TotalEnergies.
Since acquiring XTO for $36 billion in 2010, Exxon Mobil has gotten better at drilling unconventional shale plays. But it needed Pioneer’s high-quality acreage to keep running in the Permian Basin, CEO Darren Woods said at CERAWeek by S&P Global.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions from hydrocarbons through carbon capture and other technologies achieves better results than alternative energies, Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser said.
CEO Darren Woods said Exxon Mobil is trying to secure preemption rights over Hess Corp.'s Guyana assets in its dispute with Chevron, not buy the company itself.
Project Canary CEO talks energy transition, the need for renewables and fossil fuels to coexist and tackling Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions.
Chevron Global Gas President Freeman Shaheen discusses the supermajor's LNG efforts, including projects in Australia and Angola and the partnerships needed to great liquefaction plans built.
As environmental concerns and human rights become top priorities, Canadian E&Ps producing from oil sands say their commodity should be the preferred barrel going forward.
Calgary-based midstream giant Enbridge is investing billions to grow its oil and gas pipeline network and storage capacity, President and CEO Greg Ebel told Hart Energy.
Industry experts argued a new business mindset is essential for bringing about the energy transition in a discussion during CERAWeek by S&P Global’s panel on scaling critical technology.
Currently, “anyone can effectively bring … litigation against one of our projects and it gets you caught in the courts forever,” said Chad Zamarin, Williams Cos. executive vice president, corporate strategic development, who argued a minimum reasonable threshold should be required.