The IPTC Summit on AI for the Energy Industry will bring together decision-makers, technologists, and domain experts to examine how artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping upstream operations and the broader energy value chain.
Kanoo Energy, a division of Kanoo Industrial & Energy under the Yusuf Bin Ahmed Kanoo Group, has signed a strategic distribution agreement with TECO Motors for electric motor replacement at Aramco and in Bahrain.
Responding to the needs of workers and helping ensure they have the right equipment for their jobsite, MSA Safety, a global leader in advanced safety products, technologies and solutions, launched its latest detection solution at the 2025 A+A International Trade Fair & Congress (A+A), in Dusseldorf, Germany.
Byrne Equipment Rental, one of the Middle East’s leading equipment rental companies, has been recognised as an ADIPEC Impact Champion 2025.
TGT Diagnostics has unveiled Octasense, one of the industry's first integrated well and reservoir diagnostic platforms that delivers eight critical insights in just one descent.
The World Future Energy Summit could well be the Middle East’s most influential event for promoting renewable energy and clean tech as the blueprints for a sustainable future.
The 21st Americas LNG Summit & Exhibition in Lake Charles gathered 3,000 energy leaders and experts from 50 countries to discuss LNG’s evolving role in global energy security, economic growth, and the clean transition
The world is running out of time to prepare for worsening climate impacts, as global adaptation efforts continue to lag dangerously behind the growing scale of the crisis, warns the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in its Adaptation Gap Report 2025: Running on Empty.
The latest 2025 NDC Synthesis Report, released ahead of COP 30 in Belem, paints a mixed picture of global climate ambition. And while nations are showing unprecedented commitment to cutting greenhouse gas emissions and embedding climate action into national policy, the pace of progress remains well short of the Paris Agreement’s 1.5 deg C target.
Two very different decisions, one in Oxford, the other in Washington, are raising alarm over the shrinking space for open climate debate.