Legislators should design transportation policies that support Americans' demand for cheaper, cleaner, and on-demand travel choices.
Unconventional oil development faces a range of economic, technical, environmental and political challenges.
Cautious, deliberate guidelines based on up-to-date data and information are needed to manage the increasingly diverse assortment of unconventional oils.
A new special report from the International Energy Agency provides insights into environmental challenges associated with developing unconventional gas and charts a guideline for the rules to address them.
The battle over the Keystone XL Pipeline has become so heated it's easy to lose sight of whether the project is in America's national interest and what are the measurable benefits and costs.
ExxonMobil has managed to thrive in an industry fraught with risk and to thwart those who might oppose its interests at nearly every turn.
China must be able to collect accurate data and maintain a stable carbon price if its new pilot program for emissions-trading can be deemed a success.
Significant policy, climate, and economic challenges face the use of unconventional oil as a new energy resource.
Given the size of China's and the United States' coal resources, their decisions to tap and utilize that coal will play a significant role in determining the future of the global climate.
ExxonMobil’s size, its profits, internal discipline and the critically important product it sold—energy—gave the company a huge amount of power.