'(Human resource) professionals see where this is headed, but the problem is the executives aren't listening to them.'
To know where you’re going, sometimes you have to know where you are.
Take a look through the U.S. perspective regarding the development of energy fuels world wide.
Looking beyond the next 10 years investors are starting to inquire about how the global climate changes will impact the investments they are making today.
Thanks to stubbornly-high commodity prices, record profits are being rung up at a host of oil and gas firms. For the most part they're using the accruing volumes of cash to pay down debt and spruce up their financial standing in general.
The energy industry is at a crossroads — petroleum is in the rearview mirror and a methane-based economy is squarely ahead.
The Middle East dominates the world's energy scene, the world's politics, the world's media focus — and in Dallas, the Middle East will again be in the spotlight.
Embrace the Future, Celebrate the Past: It's time for the Association's 89th annual meeting, which will be held this month at the Dallas Convention Center.
Thirty winters ago, the world was jolted to find how important oil is in their lives.
Planning to attend the AAPG Annual Meeting in Dallas? If so, an important deadline looms this month.
The Casablanca oil field, discovered in 1975 and located on the Mediterranean shelf edge, has been greatly significant in the world’s offshore oil industry activity, besides being by far the biggest oil field in Spain.
An influx of recent mergers and acquisitions has brought even more operators to the Permian, and there are some regions where there is still much geoscience to be done.
The South American country of Suriname has launched an aggressive campaign to ramp up offshore oil production.
Perhaps you did a double take pulling the April issue of EXPLORER from the mailbox. What is this? If you joined AAPG in the last 40 years, you’ve only known EXPLORER in its long-standing tabloid format. It worked well for many years as our advertisers – particularly seismic companies – loved the large format and the ability to display their data on a sweeping canvas. For readers, it was a little more awkward.