Biz Buzz The Daily Sentinel Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:38 PM PDT A casualty of layoffs at a plumbing-supply company, Ivan Sotelo was looking for a job. Clayton Carmack, on the other hand, still had a full-time job, but the energy-drilling industry can be quite volatile when it comes to job security, and he was looking to invest in a business rather than the stock market. So, the soon-to-be brothers-in-law became business partners in mid-January when they ... | Xcel seeks rate increase for natural gas The Daily Sentinel Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:38 PM PDT By SENTINEL STAFF Xcel Energy is proposing a rate increase in which natural gas customers can expect to pay 12 to 14 percent more during the second quarter of 2011 compared with the same three months last year. | Japan energy needs won't hurt world - Saudi Aramco CEO thewest.com.au Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:31 PM PDT BEIJING (Reuters) - Japan's demand for oil and gas will increase as it rebuilds from its devastating earthquake, but this will not have a significant impact on global markets, Saudi Aramco CEO Khalid al-Falih told Reuters on Sunday. | 'Children of Reagan' reshape Washington Boulder Daily Camera Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:27 PM PDT WASHINGTON -- The thing Rep. Scott DesJarlais remembers most about the energy crisis of 1979 is collecting extra gas money from his buddies. | Off-the-grid island back on agenda Key West Citizen Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:22 PM PDT A Keys Energy Services board meeting Wednesday is expected to become the latest battlefield in a protracted war over bringing commercial power to No Name Key. The board will once again discuss -- and... read more | Beyond the nuclear age Khaleej Times Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:10 PM PDT German chancellor Angela Merkel has once again led from the front. Her categorical concern over reliance on nuclear power plants, in the wake of Honshu tragedy, and the call for diversifying energy needs should not merely be a debating point. | TOO MUCH ENERGY IN OFFICE The Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:09 PM PDT S ET IN THE London offices of an energy corporation very much like BP, and delving into the employees' erotic infrastructures, this novel could hardly be more topical. True for us, BP evokes polluted waters rather than Cupid's hunting ground, and the early pages read like a TV shooting script in need of a wide-angle camera and a wardrobe staff to flesh out the plot and players. But soon enough ... | IAEA: Radiation detected in milk, vegetables near Fukushima plant GMA News Sat, 19 Mar 2011 22:07 PM PDT Radiation levels in samples of milk and certain vegetables near a quake-crippled nuclear plant in Japan have been found to exceed Japanese government safety limits, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said before midnight Saturday (Manila time). | | |
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