
Market News 
05.08.09
Oil Poised for Largest Weekly Gain Since March
Crude oil rose for a third day in New York, poised for the biggest weekly gain s...
05.06.09
China Clean Energy Announces Biodiesel Plant Progress
China Clean Energy has announced that the construction of its Jiangyin biodiesel...
05.06.09
EU Grain Crop Forecast To Decline in 2009
Following the record grains crop in 2008-9, this year's total EU grain crop is c...
05.06.09
US Biodiesel Production Falls in March
US biodiesel production fell to 30 million gallons in March 2009, compared with ...
05.04.09
Argentine Farmers Plan First Bloc in Congress
Argentine farmers are planning to create their first bloc in Congress by alignin...
05.04.09
World Oil Demand To Fall More than Expected
World oil demand is forecast to fall more than expected in 2009, as growth in Ch...
05.04.09
Rotterdam Storage Tight on Decreased Oil Demand
Rotterdam is running out of space to store crude as global oil demand posts its ...
05.04.09
US soybean prices rose over 2%, trading above $11 a bushel for the first time in...
05.04.09
US Biodiesel Prices Down on Week
US biodiesel rack prices decreased last week, even as petroleum diesel remained ...
05.01.09
High CPO Prices Slow Asian Market
High palm oil prices have slowed Asian markets as the biodiesel feedstock is cur...
Experts Raise Oil Supply Concerns
11.01.07
Leading figures from the Middle East oil industry are warning that the world is struggling to sustain rising oil production.
"Supply may not be possible to increase beyond a certain level, say around 100 million barrels," Libya's National Oil Corp chairman Shokri Ghanem said at the annual Oil & Money conference. "In some countries, production is going down and we are not discovering any more of those huge oil wells we used to discover in the Sixties or the Fifties."
Sadad al-Husseini, a key architect of Saudi Arabian energy production policy while at Saudi Aramco, said world oil production had already peaked. "We are already three years into level production," he told the conference.
In contrast, the International Energy Agency has said that supply will rise from 86 million barrels per day now to 116 million by 2030 to meet demand.
About World Energy