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What’s an oil producer to do when it sees its core product under threat from declining demand and a war-torn neighborhood?
UAE investors, led by XRG, offered nearly $30 billion to acquire Australian oil and gas producer Santos at $8.99 per share, a 28% premium. Following the deal announcement, the South Australian ...
The Melbourne-based engineering company wins the Sustainability Leaders award in the professional services, engineering, ...
Adnoc's investment arm XRG PJSC joins peers including Saudi Aramco in targeting LNG, tapping the potential of one of the ...
June 16 (Reuters) - Australian shares closed flat on Monday, as a rally in energy stocks driven by higher oil prices was partially offset by weak performances across gold miners, even as gas producer ...
At 36 years old, Mats Hummels has just ended his career as a professional soccer player. For Kazuyoshi Miura, that would only ...
OPEC Sees Lower Supply Growth From Rivals, Keeps Demand Outlook Steady The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries trimmed next year's forecast for supply growth from the U.S. and other ...
Abu Dhabi's state-owned oil company and sovereign wealth fund have teamed with U.S. private equity firm Carlyle to make an ...
Santos said it intends to endorse to shareholders its potential acquisition by the ADNOC-led consortium, a year after ending ...
Santos could see minted Middle East interests plow cash into Queensland gas scene, and that could be big for this junior.
The $30 billion takeover of Santos, one of Australia’s largest gas producers, by a Middle East consortium would give a ...
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