| Dieter Helm's new book "The Carbon Crunch" reads a bit like a detective novel. It is about "who killed climate policy". And how we can reviv...
| Dieter Helm's new book "The Carbon Crunch" reads a bit like a detective novel. It is about "who killed climate policy". And how we can reviv...
| The International Energy Agency's latest Energy Technology Perspectives report presents a bleak picture of the world's current state of prog...
| The International Energy Agency (IEA), whose membership is limited to the countries of the OECD, is faced with a steady decline of its clout...
| What the world needs to keep up with the strong global growth in energy in the coming decades is two things above all: Iraq - and shale gas....
| International cooperation in energy markets has been strengthened in recent years, observes Noé van Hulst, Director of the new Energy Academ...
| Energy security expert Matthew Hulbert and European Energy Review's chief editor Karel Beckman got together to provide a quick guide to 2012...
| EER's UK correspondent Alex Forbes attended the launch last week of the International Energy Agency's flagship publication, the World Energy...
| Europe is about to acquire a new major oil and gas province: the Levant Basin. In this region in the Eastern Mediterranean the world's two l...
| These days no energy project can succeed without public backing. This holds true not only for nuclear, coal-fired and other power stations,...
| What do the Arab Spring, Fukushima and worldwide droughts add up to? The bottom line, says Michael Klare: Any expectations that ever-increas...