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Profile of an Oil Producer: Angola

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Posted by admin on October 26, 2009 at 1:35 pm 3 Comments


by Nick Malinowski

Large Potential, Large Problems
A potential economic powerhouse in Africa, Angola has surpassed Nigeria and become the continent’s biggest oil producer. The country benefits from billions of dollars in foreign development investments and relative political stability as the country emerges from the brutal chaos of its 27-year civil war, which ended nearly eight [...]

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Heating Oil Industry Movers: ICPA President Gene Guilford

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Posted by Josh Garrett on October 19, 2009 at 3:03 pm 9 Comments


HeatingOil.com is proud to present the first installment of the “Industry Movers” series—an ongoing series of interviews and discussions with important figures in the heating oil and energy industries.
HeatingOil.com editor Josh Garrett spoke with Gene Guilford, president of the Independent Connecticut Petroleum Association, about current and future heating oil prices, the effects of speculation on [...]

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Profile of an Oil Producer: Brazil

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Posted by Kristy Kershaw on October 19, 2009 at 3:02 pm 7 Comments


The largest and most populous country in South America, Brazil boasts more than just beautiful beaches and beautiful people, though it does have its fair share of both. Notwithstanding large disparities in income levels and high crime rates, Brazil stands as South America’s leading economic power, supported by its new and challenging role as [...]

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Black Gold on the White Frontier: the Race for Arctic Oil

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Posted by Steven Zweig on October 15, 2009 at 5:15 pm 2 Comments


The Arctic has long drawn our gaze northward. The inhospitable realm of endless ice and frozen temperatures, of months-long night and a complete absence of what mankind usually needs to survive—solid land and plants—has attracted explorers and settlers for hundreds of years.
As the world moved toward the 21st Century, interest in the Arctic waned, [...]

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Profile of an Oil Producer: Canada

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Posted by Carol Sonenklar on October 15, 2009 at 11:33 am 6 Comments


Go on, take a guess: which country is the largest importer of crude oil to the US? If you guessed Saudi Arabia, you’d be wrong. Russia? Nope.
It’s Canada. That’s right: our friendly neighbor to the north. Most people don’t think about Canada as a major oil powerhouse; probably because, unlike other suppliers of [...]

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Profile of an Oil Producer: Libya

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Posted by Steven Zweig on September 29, 2009 at 12:41 pm 3 Comments


Libya is located in northern Africa, on the southern shore of the Mediterranean Sea. Bordered by Egypt to the east, Algeria to the west, and Niger, Chad, and Sudan to the south, Libya occupies a strategic position, near the intersection of Southern Europe, Islamic Africa, and the Middle East, and touching on non-Islamic Africa [...]

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Profile of an Oil Producer: Nigeria

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Posted by Jennifer Schwartz on September 28, 2009 at 10:58 am 3 Comments


The Federal Republic of Nigeria, tucked up in Africa’s western curve, is the continent’s leading oil producer. It is here – in the Niger delta where a web of shallow waterways spills into the Gulf of Guinea – where international oil companies have set up shop, despite being generally ill-received by local tribes [...]

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What is a Puff Back?

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Posted by Michael Hoven on September 9, 2009 at 4:00 pm 3 Comments


Puff back—hardly a term to inspire fear in the hearts of homeowners, unless they’ve been unfortunate enough to live through one. A puff back is a misfire in the furnace that, at its worst, can send soot throughout your home, requiring expensive cleaning and restoration in addition to repairs on your heating system. While [...]

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T. Boone Pickens: From Oilman to New Energy Entrepreneur

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Posted by admin on September 3, 2009 at 10:58 am 2 Comments


by Rachel Deahl

Oilman and environmentalist aren’t labels that often go hand in hand, but T. Boone Pickens, one of the few men on the planet who can arguably lay claim to both, isn’t your average oilman—and he’s certainly not your average environmentalist.

Pickens was born into the oil business but had to work [...]

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Maintaining Your Home Heating Oil System

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Posted by Steven Zweig on September 3, 2009 at 9:09 am 4 Comments


Like your car or truck, your home heating system requires regular maintenance to function its best. Keeping your furnace (forced air system) or boiler (water or steam systems) in good working order will save you money, reduce pollution, and increase your comfort. Fortunately, home heating systems are more like cars from the 1960s or [...]

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Electric Cars Motor Ahead, But Will Consumers Leave Gasoline-Powered Cars Behind?

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Posted by Steven Zweig on September 2, 2009 at 2:44 pm 3 Comments


The latest British invasion involves neither Redcoats nor mop-haired guitar bands; instead, it’s taking the form of electric cars.
The electric Mini Cooper (or Mini E) is an updated version of the British icon, and has come to select U.S. communities. New York City’s government, plus towns and government agencies across New Jersey’s Bergen, Passaic, [...]

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Back to School and Going Green: Environmentally-Friendly Options for the Kids

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Posted by Joanne Eglash on September 2, 2009 at 11:27 am 0 Comments


Children may complain that summer never lasts long enough, but back-to-school time is here. And that usually means shopping for essentials such as notebooks, pens, backpacks, and, of course, the ingredients for those PBJ’s.

All of that purchasing usually involves driving around, spending time and money to find your oldest daughter the perfect purple purse. [...]

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When Green Energy is Blue Energy: Power From the Sea

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Posted by Steven Zweig on September 2, 2009 at 10:32 am 3 Comments


Before long it will be good to hear that there’s a giant Anaconda nearby: “Anaconda” is the name for one of the many technologies that promise to tap the ocean’s unlimited power.

Oceans cover 70 percent of the Earth’s surface, which means they intercept almost three-quarters of all incoming solar energy. In addition [...]

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The Smart Grid: Essential for America’s Renewable Energy Future

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Posted by Nick Malinowski on September 1, 2009 at 3:54 pm 5 Comments


The need for a smart grid has been recognized by policymakers at all levels of government as a crucial step towards building a more efficient energy economy — reducing emissions of greenhouse gases and increasing the employment of low-carbon energy sources. While the United States has benefited from innovations in energy generation—new and more [...]

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Hybrids and Plug-In Hybrids: Green Cars of Today and Tomorrow

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Posted by Steven Zweig on September 1, 2009 at 2:41 pm 4 Comments


Question: what is a green vehicle but not an alternative fuel vehicle?

Answer: a hybrid car.

Hybrids are cars that have two motors or engines: a conventional gasoline engine and an electric motor. In a typical hybrid, like the Toyota Prius, the gasoline engine is primary—it provides most of the power. The electric motor provides additional power [...]

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Hydrogen Cars: The Zero Emissions, Fossil-Fuel Alternative

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Posted by Steven Zweig on September 1, 2009 at 1:18 pm 4 Comments


by Steve Zweig

Most people, to the extent (probably small!) that they think of hydrogen at all, probably think of the Hindenburg, the famous German airship that burst into flames in New Jersey in 1937. It was from the coverage of this disaster that the phrase “Oh, the humanity” entered popular culture. The Hindenburg blackened [...]

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How Heating Degree Days can Help the Home Heating Oil Consumer

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Posted by Kristy Kershaw on September 1, 2009 at 11:01 am 24 Comments


by Kristy Kershaw

Do any amount of research into heating oil and energy costs and you’re bound to come across the concept of “Heating Degree Day.” And while it’s ultimately a pretty straightforward concept, there is lots of confusing and technical information surrounding any Google search into degree days.

To break it down [...]

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What Cap and Trade Means For Heating Oil Consumers

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Posted by Jennifer Schwartz on August 21, 2009 at 10:27 am 9 Comments


Few people now deny the trajectory of greenhouse gas production and its effects on the environment and economy. In the United States, one potential solution to our emissions problem is a mandatory cap and trade program that will impose an overall limit on the amount of greenhouse gases we emit into the atmosphere each [...]

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Russian Oil Roulette

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Posted by Carol Sonenklar on August 21, 2009 at 8:33 am 7 Comments


In recent years, Russia has become a major player in the oil industry, sparking hope for increasing world oil supplies and potentially allowing Western economies to ease their dependence on Middle Eastern countries. In the earlier part of this decade, Russian emerged onto the oil scene in grand form, quickly producing more oil than [...]

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Five Amazing Renewable Energy Advancements

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Posted by Jennifer Schwartz on August 19, 2009 at 3:13 pm 10 Comments


by Jennifer Schwartz

As the American public anxiously awaits the next oil price spike and grapples with its dependence of foreign crude, renewable energy advancements continue to prosper in the shadow of our fossil fuel addiction.
In fact, much of the technology needed to spark an energy revolution in the U.S. is already available. How and [...]

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