E-Mail Address: Password:
Forgot password?
Click here to register
[login]
Home Articles Stocks Faq About Us Contact Us RSS Feeds May 22, 2012
SEARCH: 
Energy Tribune Jobs
(click here)
Featured Stories
Guest Opinions
Americas
Europe
Russia
Middle East
China
Australasia
East Mediterranean
Africa
Nuclear
Commentary
Print Issues
Natural Gas from Egyp...
Oil Prices Hostage to...
Iran and the Oil Scar...
From Soviet to Putin ...
In 2012, Let’s Align ...
Are Chesapeake’s Prob...
Wind Energy: The Whee...
Understanding E = mc2
Europe’s Other Power ...
Brazil Tested by Lati...

E.U. and Iran: No Chance for Sanctions to Work

Posted on Jan. 15, 2008

At the very moment that key European Union leaders such as France’s Nicolas Sarkozy and Germany’s Angela Merkel have become more hawkish on Iran, the U.S. mood appears to have softened, due in part to the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (N.I.E.) published in early December. The report declared that although Iran had been actively pursuing a nuclear weapon, it suspended the program in 2003.

Undoubtedly, Americans are suffering from war fatigue. With the 2008 election on the horizon, anti-war sentiment and Bush-bashing is in vogue in the mostly liberal-dominated media. So what are we to make of this report that so suddenly turned all analyses of Iran’s nuclear situation upside down? And how might sanctions work in this environment?

Iran is perhaps the most striking example of the chasm that separates the E.U. from the United States, a divorce that has only been aggravated by the war in Iraq. There are echoes of Cold War Ostpolitik, when West Germany separated its position towards the Soviet Union from its presumed ally and would-be-protector, the United States. At that time it attracted the ire of America and created lasting tensions inside the Western alliance. We are probably at that same point today.

Clearly a nuclear-armed theocratic Iran would be both a lot different and more dangerous than the Soviet Union. It would be every rational person’s nightmare, and this includes most in the Middle East. But for quite some time many Europeans, always eager to “show them Yanks,” have failed to see the danger from a nuclear-armed Iran. This is a country that cannot be constrained by the old Mutually Assured Destruction doctrine, which may be exactly what Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad craves.

What Europeans also fail to see is that Israel, the country that Ahmadinejad and his Ayatollah masters want “wiped out from the face of the earth,” simply cannot let Iran develop nuclear weapons. This is no mere armchair debate for Israel. Iran has already fought proxy wars against Israel on at least two occasions in Lebanon. It also showed Israel that total destruction of an enemy craving suicide is the only possible answer.

Here’s our view: if Iran does not stop its uranium enrichment program and prove it has abandoned its nuclear pretensions, we can expect a U.S.-backed, or at least a U.S.-tolerated, Israeli strike on Iranian facilities, possibly in 2008. If this leads to a wider war, then that would be Iran’s choice. And as President Sarkozy said in August, a nuclear-armed Iran is “not acceptable” because as he and Chancellor Merkel have both stated publicly, Iran simply “cannot be trusted.”

Furthermore, while policy towards Iran may appear to take a different direction in the current U.S. political climate colored by presidential campaign rhetoric, it is unlikely, that an Israeli strike on that country would be opposed by a Democratic administration headed, for example, by Hillary Clinton.

Similar predictions, contrary to the prevailing mood for a dynamic conflict resolution, have recently been voiced by Dominique Moïsi, a European political analyst and senior adviser at the Institut Français des Relations Internationales in Paris.

What then is to be made of the recent N.I.E. report written by three career diplomats in the U.S. State Department? One source quoted in the Wall Street Journal described the authors as “hyper-partisan anti-Bush officials.” More pertinently, as Jed Babbin wrote in early December for Human Events, the conservative Web site, “According to a House source who sat with the three primary authors in a two-hour briefing…the three – Thomas Fingar, Vann Van Diepen and Kenneth Brill – refused to say the 2005 estimate was wrong though adamantly defending their ‘high confidence’ conclusion that Iran stopped developing nuclear weapons in 2003.” Babbin also goes on to remind us that Fingar expressly stated before the House Armed Services Committee last July: “We assess that Tehran is determined to develop nuclear weapons.” Nowhere does Fingar explain what has changed since July. We concur with Babbin’s assessment that the report authors plainly have no real confidence in their own conclusions.

Within days of the report’s publication, E.U. and NATO foreign ministers discussed its conclusions and unanimously decided that its subject, the suspension of the nuclear weapons program, was not the issue; the issue was Iran’s refusal to suspend uranium enrichment – which would enable it to quickly re-start the weapons program. Apparently foreign ministers from the E.U. and NATO believe the N.I.E. report is irrelevant to discussions of continuing sanctions.

It is a fact that the technology for uranium enrichment, en route to a nuclear weapon, is far more cumbersome and challenging than the actual fabrication of delivery systems, which essentially can be accomplished overnight.

Even though the N.I.E. report has caused confusion and the rhetoric is now all over the place (with some European leaders surprisingly taking a more militant stance on Iran), there is still no chance that sanctions could work against Iran – whether imposed by the U.N. (December 2006) or by the U.S. unilaterally (March 2007). The E.U.-27 is Iran’s largest trading partner, and its major trading companies fear that China, Iran’s second-largest trading partner, will steal their markets if they turn the embargoing screw more than they already have (which is very little).

In 2006, the E.U. traded over 25 billion euros with Iran, fairly evenly balanced between exports and imports. China runs a distant second with about 11 billion euros. Of course, Iran has a lot of what Europeans really want: energy sources. Iran beckons seductively as an alternative to Russia’s emerging stranglehold on the E.U. as its dominant energy supplier, especially in natural gas.

Not making the news, but touching the most sensitive issues of nuclear technology and proliferation, is that Europeans (and Americans) could benefit enormously from Iran. Today, Iran burns an enormous amount of oil for power generation, more than 2 million barrels per day. (Iran’s power demand is soaring. Between 2000 and 2006, power generation in the country grew by 66 percent.) Sanctions have hurt Iran in this respect, and peaceful nuclear development for power generation would make sense, freeing huge supplies of oil for the international market. Such an infusion would relieve oil price pressures tremendously. If only Iran could be trusted.

It is clear that the E.U. would carry real trade clout with Iran, if only it could act against Iran with a unified voice. What the E.U. bureaucracy would like to do, and what it can do in the face of its member states’ self-interest, are two different things. But if the timid approach of the multicultural E.U. (and perhaps of the U.N.) is governed by the great fear that an attack on Iran will be been seen as an attack on a unified Muslim world, it is based on pure illusion. That fear fails to grasp that Sunni and Shia Muslims have been at each other’s throats for as long as Islamists have contested the Judeo-Christian hegemony.

Over the last year roughly a dozen Muslim regimes, all Sunni, declared that they too want to go nuclear. In some cases a factor is the genuine shortage of electricity in the region. But early in 2007, Jordan’s King Abdullah countered that as the main reason, saying, “The rules have changed on the nuclear subject throughout the whole region. After this summer [referring to Iran’s proxy war with Israel in south Lebanon] everybody’s going for nuclear programs.” Thus, the nuclear push results from fear of Shia Iran and its regional ambitions. The predominantly Sunni Middle East does not want a nuclear Iran any more than the West does.

Unable to turn the only trade-sanctions screw that could really hurt Iran, the E.U. has no more clout than the U.N. And if the E.U.’s fear of countenancing force is in fact a fear of a backlash in the Muslim world, then, as the nuclear surge issue reveals, it needs to “get real.” Because – ignoring the usual protesting-for-public-consumption rhetoric – in the event of a U.S.-Israeli strike in Iran, most of the Muslim world would be on the side of the West.

Finally, there has been sharp disagreement here at Energy Tribune over the issue of a nuclear Iran (see “From the Editor” on page 1). The authors of this piece were heartened by John Vinocur’s December 10 piece in the International Herald Tribune, which reported that even European officials who saw the threat of military action as a “verbal plus” now “consider the threat squandered,” given the new N.I.E. The piece also quotes a source close to the International Atomic Energy Agency as saying the new N.I.E. was “mushy.” Unfortunately, Israel doesn’t have the armchair luxury of mushy opinions. Israel knows Iran’s stated intentions for the Israeli people – and that uranium enrichment offers them the means to carry them through.

Stumble It!
Share on Facebook   Share on Twitter
Back Home   Back to Top
Related Articles
Will LNG Exports Rescue the North Americ...
By Pavel Molchanov & Alex Morris 
May. 21 2012, 3:23 EST
Europe’s Other Power Crisis: Energy
By Peter C Glover 
May. 18 2012, 3:22 EST
Are Chesapeake’s Problems A Red Flag For...
By Geoffrey Styles 
May. 17 2012, 2:17 EST
Brazil Tested by Latin America Energy Po...
By Andrés Cala 
May. 15 2012, 2:18 EST
Wind Energy: The Wheels are Coming Off t...
By Marita Noon 
May. 14 2012, 1:13 EST
Argentina’s ‘Chavez’ Risks Shale Potenti...
By Peter C Glover 
May. 11 2012, 12:54 EST
Current and Projected Costs for Biofuels...
By Robert Rapier 
May. 9 2012, 10:50 EST
The Use of Raw Gas as Compressed Natural...
By Michael J. Economides 
May. 7 2012, 11:44 EST
Ehrlich, False Prophets and the ‘Futures...
By Peter C Glover 
May. 4 2012, 12:59 EST
Global Warming Did Not Eat Your Life
By Art Horn 
May. 3 2012, 4:08 EST
US Natural Gas Price Nears $10 per Barre...
By Geoffrey Styles 
May. 1 2012, 3:19 EST
Oil and Iraq
By Professor Ferdinand E. Banks 
Apr. 30 2012, 4:02 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Waste Not, Want Not
By Terry Tamminen 
May. 21 2012, 2:58 EST
Low Natural Gas Prices Threaten Carbon C...
By Matthew L. Wald 
May. 21 2012, 2:05 EST
Shale Gas Boom To Alter Energy And Oil L...
By Henning Gloystein 
May. 21 2012, 1:09 EST
A Political Debate Plays Out Among LA Oi...
By Alana Semuels 
May. 21 2012, 11:09 EST
Brown Coal Exports Not Yet Viable
By Tom Arup 
May. 21 2012, 11:03 EST
Qatar To Benefit From Global Shift To Na...
By Pratap John 
May. 21 2012, 11:01 EST
Saudi Arabia Knocks Off Russia As World’...
By Florian Neuhof  
May. 21 2012, 10:36 EST
U.S. Energy Independence Will Be Obtaine...
By Zachary Moitoza 
May. 18 2012, 4:15 EST
Dump The Pump: Could Peak Oil Be Volunta...
By David Strahan 
May. 18 2012, 2:06 EST
Kiev Stands To Lose EU-Russia Natural Ga...
By Daniel J. Graeber  
May. 18 2012, 12:19 EST
Canada Oil Sands Output Seen Beating Pro...
By Jeffrey Jones 
May. 18 2012, 12:11 EST
What Big Oil Can Learn From A First Grad...
By Bill Eikenberry 
May. 18 2012, 11:05 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Groups Sue Again Over Oil Drilling Off A...
By Jim Carlton 
May. 18 2012, 10:38 EST
Vermont First State To Ban Fracking
By CNN 
May. 17 2012, 1:03 EST
Solar Industry Workers Want Policies Tha...
By Zachary Shahan 
May. 17 2012, 10:59 EST
Canada’s Enbridge to Expand Oil Pipeline...
By Edward Welsch 
May. 17 2012, 10:50 EST
Energy Secretary Steven Chu Touts Arizon...
By Ryan Randazzo  
May. 16 2012, 10:40 EST
Asian Energy Giants, Shell To Move Ahead...
By Washington Post 
May. 16 2012, 10:38 EST
Google-Backed U.S. Wind Power Line Clear...
By Reuters 
May. 15 2012, 10:47 EST
Colombia, China Strike Oil Deals
By Simon Hall 
May. 10 2012, 11:17 EST
Brazil Shelves Plans To Build New Nuclea...
By AFP  
May. 10 2012, 10:54 EST
Romney Slams Obama Energy Policies
By Shawna Shepherd 
May. 10 2012, 10:50 EST
Sec. Salazar To Visit Oil, Gas Developme...
By Current-Argus 
May. 9 2012, 11:31 EST
Vermont First State To Outlaw Fracking
By Jason McLure 
May. 9 2012, 11:29 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Total Confirms End To North Sea Gas Leak
By Fox Business 
May. 21 2012, 11:13 EST
UAE Plans To Join Gas Opec
By Trade Arabia 
May. 16 2012, 11:29 EST
BP To Seek Oil, Gas In Deep Atlantic Nea...
By Linda Hutchinson-Jafar 
May. 16 2012, 11:03 EST
North Sea Oil Operation To Stop Gas Leak...
By Christine Levelle 
May. 16 2012, 10:47 EST
Canada, Poland Partner To Develop Shale ...
By Channel News Asia 
May. 15 2012, 10:40 EST
Germany To Close All Nuclear Plants By 2...
By Hindustan Times 
May. 14 2012, 10:53 EST
MOL Mulls Joining BP’s Gas Pipeline Proj...
By Reuters 
May. 14 2012, 10:38 EST
Saudi Aramco To Provide Full Crude Suppl...
By Sherry Su  
May. 10 2012, 10:59 EST
Report Released On UAE’s Nuclear Program...
By Gulf News 
May. 9 2012, 11:34 EST
Turkey Mulls Nuclear Power Plant Options
By New Europe 
May. 7 2012, 12:49 EST
Statoil Signs Arctic Deal With Rosneft
By Alexander Kolyandr  
May. 7 2012, 12:16 EST
Greenpeace Activists Arrested After Swed...
By Fox News 
May. 3 2012, 10:08 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Shell, Chevron Likely To Win Ukraine Sha...
By Pavel Polityuk 
May. 10 2012, 11:13 EST
Japan Eyes Gas Pipeline From Russia
By RT 
May. 4 2012, 2:21 EST
China Makes New Proposal On Russia Gas D...
By Economic Times 
Apr. 30 2012, 11:52 EST
Eni Begins Gas Flow In Russia Field
By Rigzone 
Apr. 20 2012, 12:26 EST
Greenpeace Protests Arctic Drilling For ...
By Gulf Times 
Apr. 18 2012, 12:30 EST
Russians Follow Chinese Into Canada’s Oi...
By Claudia Cattaneo 
Apr. 17 2012, 12:19 EST
UK Fears Russia’s Nuclear Interest
By Tracey Boles 
Apr. 16 2012, 12:49 EST
Russia: We Would Build Safe UK Nuclear P...
By Emily Gosden 
Apr. 10 2012, 11:51 EST
Russian Government Expects Oil Prices To...
By RT  
Apr. 4 2012, 5:15 EST
Russia Plans To Build Nuclear Space Engi...
By UPI 
Mar. 29 2012, 12:04 EST
Gazprom Seeks Israeli Gas
By Robert M Cutler  
Mar. 28 2012, 11:48 EST
Poland Cuts Estimate Of Shale Gas Reserv...
By Marynia Kruk 
Mar. 22 2012, 12:48 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Iran Finds Its First Caspian Sea Oil
By Ladane Nasseri and Ayesha Daya  
May. 21 2012, 11:13 EST
Bahrain, US Firm Ink Solar Power Station...
By Trade Arabia 
May. 21 2012, 10:55 EST
EU Unwilling To Exempt Korea From Iran O...
By Chosunilbo 
May. 21 2012, 10:42 EST
Iraq’s Fourth Auction Will Boost Oil Hop...
By UPI 
May. 18 2012, 11:25 EST
US Gas Giant Works To Avoid Israel Elect...
By AFP 
May. 17 2012, 12:28 EST
Iran Executed A Man Convicted Of Spying ...
By CNN 
May. 15 2012, 4:45 EST
Iran, Unable To Sell Oil, Stores It On T...
By Joby Warrick and Steven Mufson 
May. 14 2012, 11:51 EST
Aramco Breaks New Ground With Oil Tradin...
By Gulf Times 
May. 14 2012, 10:56 EST
Kuwait Reviews New Oil, Gas Objectives
By UPI 
May. 14 2012, 10:43 EST
New Oil Field Discovered In Caspian Sea
By Fars News Agency 
May. 11 2012, 2:39 EST
Eni Probe Will Not Stall Kazakh Oil Proj...
By Raushan Nurshayeva 
May. 11 2012, 10:50 EST
Iran’s IAEA Envoy Calls For Review Of NP...
By Press TV 
May. 10 2012, 11:06 EST
CLOSE
MORE
U.S. Orders Tariffs On Chinese Solar Pan...
By Don Lee 
May. 18 2012, 10:42 EST
China’s Nuclear Safety And Development P...
By Esther Tanquintic-Misa 
May. 17 2012, 12:59 EST
China Plans Mega Transmission Power Line
By UPI 
May. 15 2012, 11:48 EST
Qatar Buys ‘Major’ Stake In Oil Giant Sh...
By Alarabiya News 
May. 11 2012, 2:15 EST
Vice Premier Calls For Energy Co-op With...
By China Daily 
May. 4 2012, 3:40 EST
Coal Industry Restructuring To Continue
By Du Juan 
May. 3 2012, 3:42 EST
Solar Firms Hope For Free Access To Inte...
By Nuying Huang, Taipei and Jackie Chang 
May. 2 2012, 1:24 EST
China Mulls Guarantees For Ships Carryin...
By Business Standard 
May. 1 2012, 12:36 EST
Philippines Accepts Bids For 5 Oil And G...
By Canadian Business 
Apr. 27 2012, 12:31 EST
Oil, Gas At Heart Of South China Sea Dis...
By BBC News 
Apr. 16 2012, 11:33 EST
Chinese Nuclear Reactor Enters Commercia...
By Eurasia Review 
Apr. 13 2012, 11:27 EST
CNOOC, Eni Sign Offshore Oil Pact
By Zhou Yan 
Apr. 12 2012, 11:36 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Japan Boosts Nigeria Solar Energy Projec...
By Victoria Ojeme 
May. 17 2012, 12:53 EST
Japan Assembly Agrees To Restart Reactor...
By Daily Times 
May. 15 2012, 10:52 EST
Japan To Nationalize Fukushima Utility
By Hiroko Tabuchi  
May. 9 2012, 12:40 EST
Kenya, Japan State Firms Join To Survey ...
By Kelly Gilblom and George Obulutsa 
May. 9 2012, 11:24 EST
Japan Nuclear Free For The First Time Si...
By Today Online 
May. 7 2012, 12:43 EST
No Deadline For Uranium Sale To India
By The Hindu 
May. 2 2012, 2:36 EST
Power Shortages Expected In Japan
By Mari Iwata 
May. 2 2012, 11:02 EST
India, Japan To Talk On Defence, Nuclear...
By Indrani Bagchi 
Apr. 27 2012, 12:43 EST
Japan, Vietnam Progress With Rare Earth,...
By Ryan Huang 
Apr. 23 2012, 12:39 EST
Japan’s Mitsubishi, Mitsui Ink US Gas De...
By Channel News Asia 
Apr. 19 2012, 12:39 EST
N. Korea To Refuse Nuclear Inspectors
By Channel News Asia 
Apr. 17 2012, 2:01 EST
Chevron Plans To Ship More Forties Crude...
By Reuters 
Apr. 16 2012, 11:30 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Turkey Warns Oil Companies Off Cyprus Dr...
By Oliver Tree 
May. 18 2012, 10:58 EST
Bulgaria-Greece Gas Link Ready By 2015
By Elizabeth Konstantinova  
May. 14 2012, 11:20 EST
EU Firms Among 15 Bidding For Oil, Gas D...
By Washington Post 
May. 11 2012, 10:48 EST
Turkey Starts Oil, Gas Search In North C...
By Menelaos Hadjicostis  
Apr. 27 2012, 11:30 EST
Israel, Cyprus Deal On Gas, Lebanon Snub...
By Eduard Gismatullin 
Apr. 20 2012, 12:45 EST
Cyprus Oil, Gas Tenders Get ‘Positive Re...
By Paul Tugwell 
Mar. 28 2012, 11:44 EST
Israel Opportunity To Bid For Cyprus Gas...
By Koby Yeshayahou 
Mar. 12 2012, 3:54 EST
Cyprus Says China Company Interested In ...
By People Daily 
Mar. 5 2012, 12:20 EST
Greece Invites Bids For State Gas Group
By Reuters 
Feb. 29 2012, 12:18 EST
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CLOSE
MORE
Sinopec Joins Effort To Build South Afri...
By Devon Maylie 
May. 21 2012, 10:39 EST
New Ethanol Factory Opens In Mozambique
By Macauhub 
May. 18 2012, 11:38 EST
Energy Minister Hopeful On Fracking Repo...
By All Africa 
May. 18 2012, 11:08 EST
Huge Finds Make East Africa Next Big Gas...
By Malaysian Insider 
May. 17 2012, 12:17 EST
Ghana To Export Nuclear Energy To The Su...
By Vibe Ghana 
May. 16 2012, 11:43 EST
Total Begins Bid To Stop Leak On North S...
By Christine Lavelle  
May. 15 2012, 11:37 EST
France Firm Total Stops Gas Leak In Nige...
By AFP 
May. 14 2012, 11:10 EST
African Energy Makes Coal Discovery In Z...
By Energy Business Review 
May. 11 2012, 2:42 EST
Tullow Disappoints With No Oil In Offsho...
By Sarah Kent  
May. 4 2012, 12:48 EST
Algeria Aims For Revised Energy Law In 2...
By Reuters 
May. 3 2012, 10:10 EST
Oil Pours From Sudan’s Damaged Pipeline
By Ian Timberlake  
Apr. 25 2012, 5:22 EST
South Africa Seeking Oil Supplies From G...
By Frank Owusu Obimpeh  
Apr. 24 2012, 11:53 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Kurdish Oil Deal Stirs Iraqi Tensions
By John M. Broder and Matthew L. Wald 
May. 21 2012, 2:51 EST
Iran Must Disclose More About Nuclear Pl...
By Jerusalem Post 
May. 21 2012, 11:07 EST
Nuclear Agency Chief To Visit Tehran
By George Jahn  
May. 18 2012, 11:41 EST
UAE Calls For More To Sign Nuclear Safet...
By Awad Mustafa 
May. 11 2012, 2:22 EST
Poland To Pick Nuclear Technology This Y...
By Maciej Onoszko  
May. 10 2012, 11:03 EST
Brazil Renews Support For Iran’s N. Righ...
By Fars News 
May. 7 2012, 12:54 EST
South Korea Waiting For Delhi’s Nuclear ...
By Economic Times 
May. 3 2012, 3:48 EST
Iran’s National Grid Receives Electricit...
By CRI 
May. 1 2012, 5:02 EST
Skeptical Iran Open To U.S. Overture On ...
By Ramin Mostaghim 
Apr. 30 2012, 12:50 EST
Russia To Build Two More Nuclear Reactor...
By Times of India 
Apr. 30 2012, 11:54 EST
Brussels Unhappy With Europe Nuclear Str...
By AFP 
Apr. 27 2012, 12:53 EST
Azerbaijan Urges UN To Halt Armenian Nuc...
By Ria Novosti 
Apr. 24 2012, 12:18 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Pipeline Sends Oil in New Direction
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Europe’s Worries Weigh on Oil Prices
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Oil Giants Want to Drill for N. Gas
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Does Less Nuclear Mean More CO2?
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Natural Gas Becoming Even More Popular
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Iraq Using US Drones to Protect Oil Plat...
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
China’s Nuclear Industry Reeling
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
East Africa to Join World Gas Giants
May. 21 2012, 1:00 EST
 
EU Solar Boom Sees Doubling of Capacity
May. 18 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Japan Urges Lower Energy
May. 18 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Oil Rises to Above $93
May. 18 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Iran Ships Oil On Behalf Of Syria
May. 18 2012, 1:00 EST
 
CLOSE
MORE
Pipeline Sends Oil in New Direction
May. 21 2012, 4:31 EST
[Read More]
Europe’s Worries Weigh on Oil Prices
May. 21 2012, 11:33 EST
[Read More]
Oil Giants Want to Drill for N. Gas
May. 21 2012, 11:17 EST
[Read More]
Does Less Nuclear Mean More CO2?
May. 21 2012, 11:08 EST
[Read More]
Natural Gas Becoming Even More Popul...
May. 21 2012, 11:03 EST
[Read More]
Iraq Using US Drones to Protect Oil ...
May. 21 2012, 10:54 EST
[Read More]
China’s Nuclear Industry Reeling
May. 21 2012, 10:25 EST
[Read More]
East Africa to Join World Gas Giants
May. 21 2012, 10:24 EST
[Read More]
EU Solar Boom Sees Doubling of Capac...
May. 18 2012, 2:51 EST
[Read More]
[ click here ]
FaceBook  |   Twitter
Home | Subscribe | Articles | Commentary | Stocks | Faq | About Us | Contact Us | Subscribers Only | RSS | All News
Advertise With Us