Shelf Drilling has secured a $60 million contract for 10 new oil wells in Nigeria, boosting the Niger Delta’s output.
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BOGOTA, (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – A year after Ecuador voted in a historic referendum to ban all oil drilling in a unique part of the Amazon rainforest, Indigenous leaders say the government has been slow to shut down wells in the oil-dependent South American nation. The article In Ecuador’s Amazon, scant progress after landmark oil vote appeared first on Stabroek News.
Shelf Drilling has secured a $60 million contract for 10 new oil wells in Nigeria, boosting the Niger Delta’s output.
Two more people missing and one injured after attack by ‘uncontacted’ Mashco Piro in rainforest
Two more people missing and one injured after attack by ‘uncontacted’ Mashco Piro in rainforest
More than a week after the first oil spill along the Ogboinbiri/Tebidaba pipeline at Ogboinbiri since OANDO’s acquisition, an Indigenous oil...
MANAUS, Brazil, (Reuters) – Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, after months of hedging on the issue, has committed his government...
QUITO, (Reuters) – Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa will seek changes to the constitution to allow foreign military bases to be established in...
A powerful drought in the Amazon rainforest led on Monday to the lowest water levels on the Paraguay River in more than a century, disrupting commerce...
Imperial Oil said its Norman Wells operation could shut down sooner than planned in a letter that one official called "blackmail." Others don't see it...