All Environment
- Fracking the US trade deficit
A shrinking trade deficit is one benefit of the domestic hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling revolution that has stirred passions on all sides of the debate over America's energy future.
- How Iran might win the Middle East oil game
With much of the Middle East and North Africa in a static state of upheaval, Iran could be the unlikely winner of the post-Arab Spring energy prize, Graeber writes.
- Cover StoryEnergy efficiency: How the Internet can lower your electric bill
Energy efficiency – revolutionized by cyber networks – may carry the same impact as a new oil boom. Electricity users are seeing power in their 'negawattage' as they cut their bills by 90 percent.
- What Elon Musk says about Tesla battery fire
Tesla CEO Elon Musk said that a fire in a Tesla S this week never reached the passenger compartment. Musk wrote that fires are far more common in conventional gas-powered vehicles than in electric cars.
- Popularity of federal energy efficiency program amongst farmers puts it at risk
Solar panels have been cropping up on rural farms across America, as more farmers capitalize on a $300 million federal renewable energy program that assists with the cost of installation. But the program's growing popularity could be its downfall.
- Canada looks to China, India for energy customers
With the US unable to commit, Canada is looking to China and India to sell it's vast oil and gas resources.
- Lake Berryessa wildfire smoke drifts to San Francisco
Lake Berryessa: The forest fire in Napa County had burned 500 acres and was 75 percent contained as of Friday morning, a day after it began.
- Tropical storm Karen: Why gas prices will weather the storm
Tropical storm Karen threatens to disrupt offshore US oil and gas operations during what has otherwise been a calm hurricane season. But any impact from tropical storm Karen will likely be muted by less offshore production in the Gulf of Mexico, low demand, and the government shutdown.
- US energy boom aside, OPEC still matters
North American oil markets are pulling away from foreign market because of increased domestic production. Still, OPEC producers should still hold a key stake in a changing oil game, according to the International Energy Agency.
- In government shutdown, who keeps the lights on?
The Department of Energy and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission continued to operate normally Thursday, according to officials. But if a shutdown lingers, the departments responsible for ensuring the security and reliability of the nation's electric grid will be forced to cut back.
- Tesla stock drops after Model S catches fire
Tesla stock falls 6 percent after Internet video captures Model S in flames. Tesla says a large metallic object hit a battery pack, causing a fire that firefighters struggled to put out. Tesla stock is up more than 400 percent this year.
- Fracking waste water contaminated Pennsylvania streambeds, study finds
Outflow from a treatment facility that handles fracking waste in Pennsylvania left radioactive hot spots and elevated levels of contaminants in sediment near and downstream from a discharge pipe, the study found.
- Government shutdown crimps US energy innovation
The government shutdown has a direct impact on America’s overall capacity to drive global energy innovation, Peixe writes. The short-term lack of a federal government means that many of the nation’s top energy innovation institutions and laboratories must scale down their operations, or be completely shutdown.
- Congress could undercut US-Mexico joint drilling deal in Gulf
A US-Mexico deal to divvy up energy in the Gulf of Mexico offers mutual economic benefits between close allies and neighbors. But Congress can't agree on the language to implement the pact – and time is running out.
- In oil shale, geology trumps technology
Thirty years of oil-shale failure suggests that such a development remains far off, Cobb writes. And, in a world that is trying to wean itself from fossil fuels because of climate change and the risks of depletion, time may run out unless more realistic technologies are developed.
- Gulf oil spill: How much flowed? BP trial judge to decide.
The second phase of a federal civil trial involving BP began Monday. The company faces Clean Water Act fines ranging anywhere between $2.7 billion to $18 billion for the Gulf oil spill.
- Why feds want gray wolf off the endangered species list
More than 5,000 gray wolves roam Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. Hearings are being held this week into a federal proposal to drop legal protections for the gray wolf.
- China's power capacity will double by 2030, report says
China's power generation capacity will more than double by 2030, according to a new report. Half of China's new plants will run on renewable energy but coal will continue to dominate the mix.
- Government shutdown threat sends oil prices near three-month low
Government shutdown is only the latest in a number of factors that's weighing on oil prices. Improving relations in the Middle East and steady supply in the US are putting downward pressure on oil prices that could be more long-lasting.
- Plug In Day: Electric cars accelerate up a long, winding road
Electric car enthusiasts have plenty of successes to celebrate at the third annual Plug In Day events Saturday, and more may be on the horizon. But electric cars remain a sliver of the total market, and face an uphill battle toward widespread appeal.