Big Oil just woke up to threat of rising electric car demand
The world’s biggest oil producers are starting to take electric vehicles seriously as a long-term threat.
The world’s biggest oil producers are starting to take electric vehicles seriously as a long-term threat.
Ayesha Malik considers herself an American on paper, a Pakistani by heritage, and a Saudi by upbringing. But she calls herself an Aramcon.
Volvo isn’t the only company trying to corner the electric-vehicle market, which automakers expect will grow with the proliferation of charging stations and advancements in battery tech.
The “CityTree”, a mobile installation which removes pollutants from the air, has been popping up in cities around the world, including Oslo, Paris, Brussels and Hong Kong.
United Nations human rights experts have called on Peru to suspend negotiations on a new contract for a large oilfield in the Amazon until past pollution was cleaned up and the rights of indigenous groups respected.
It’s been more than five months since President Donald Trump declared that he was putting Iran “on notice.” For the Iranian regime, that is turning out to be a rather comfortable place.
The bright minds of tomorrow want to pursue careers at Tesla, not ExxonMobil.
About 40% Americans live in counties where a “double whammy” of unhealthy levels of smog and ragweed pollen — both tied to climate change — combine to threaten respiratory health, a Natural Resources Defense Council report finds.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan has a wildly ambitious plan to make the English capital more environmentally friendly.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc plans to spend as much as $1 billion a year on its New Energies division as the transition toward renewable power and electric cars accelerates.