Despite concerns many might have, AI looks to be the next great tool for the energy industry, experts say.
EOG, Diamondback and Gulfport Energy remain optimistic—despite recent near-term volatility—and are doubling down on natural gas investments in order to meet growing energy demands.
A blank-check company backed by Roth Capital Partners and Craig-Hallum Capital Group aims to combine with Permian gas and helium producer New Era Helium.
Executives from CNX Resources, AMP and Hines say natural gas has what it takes to meet growing electricity needs of data centers.
Andium Founder and CEO Jory Schwach took the oilfield out of the dark ages of using carbon paper to monitor tank levels with his AI thermal camera. Now he foresees more growth after completing the company’s latest funding round.
Dataprana’s 30-megawatt data center in La Marque, Texas will help satiate the growing demand for cloud services, Web3 applications and digital asset mining.
Nuclear has a capacity factor of 92.5%, the highest of any source of electricity, not to mention near-zero greenhouse gas emissions.
AI data centers need a constant supply of electricity, and the nation’s grids are unprepared.
The CEOs of Baker Hughes, SLB and Japan’s Inpex see an energy expansion that includes oil and gas—with lower emissions—as the most pragmatic way to tackle climate change.
Natural gas demand is on the rise, and with that comes a flurry of measures to capitalize on evolving market needs. How are Baker Hughes and NOV navigating the changing energy landscape?