Oil and Gas
21 March 2011
Inside this issue
• Companies feel the effects of the Macondo disaster
• The UK suffers from the legacy of North Sea abundance
• Shale extraction technology leads to an oversupplied market - -
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Content
Japan’s nuclear emergency and Middle East events cast doubt on global energy policy, writes Sylvia Pfeifer
Sheila McNulty finds that it will never again be business as usual
It is officially back – last year saw a development surge with $13.8bn of projects, writes Christopher Thompson
With the price of crude three times what it was two years ago, the economics start to make sense, says Ed Crooks
With nearly a quarter of the world’s untapped reserves, revenues could transform local economies, writes Sylvia Pfeifer
Producers pin hopes on exports, but competition is stiff, says Sheila McNulty
The administration will struggle to reconcile demand and a range of safety concerns. Ed Crooks reports
Government intervention is vital to increase capacity to ensure supply security, reports David Blair
Critics say the production process eats up land that could be used for food crops, says Sylvia Pfeifer
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