Word: exxonmobils
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...committees recommended that Boeing develop a human rights policy and report on its operations in China, but they divided on a proposal to have ExxonMobil disclose information about its oil contract with Equatorial Guinea. This call for disclosure came in response to a “60 Minutes” news segment, which alleged the company gave higher revenue shares to other African nations...
While ASCR narrowly recommended the proposal for ExxonMobil, CCSR abstained, citing the resolution’s poor wording—and instead, wrote a letter to the company’s management asking it to address the proposal’s concerns. CCSR member Houghton, a former chairman of the ExxonMobil, is a director on its board...
...biggest Russian player, accounting for 20% of total production. At a presentation at a Lehman Bros. energy conference a month before Khodorkovsky was arrested, Yukos boasted that its oil production was growing 20% a year while operating costs were less than half those of the biggest U.S. firms, including ExxonMobil, Chevron and Conoco. With Yukos mired in political trouble, its production gains have ceased. But its five-year run has borne fruit: since 1998, Russian oil production has risen back to more than 9 million bbl. per day, and according to independent estimates, Yukos is single-handedly responsible for more...
...biggest Russian player, accounting for 20% of total production. At a presentation at a Lehman Bros. energy conference a month before Khodorkovsky was arrested, Yukos boasted that its oil production was growing 20% a year while operating costs were less than half those of the biggest U.S. firms, including ExxonMobil, Chevron and Conoco. With Yukos mired in political trouble, its production gains have ceased. But its five-year run has borne fruit: since 1998, Russian oil production has risen back to more than 9 million bbl. per day, and according to independent estimates, Yukos is single-handedly responsible for more...
...deposits that local firms had neither the technology nor the money to develop. Kazakhstan turned to Western companies for help, and firms like Chevron and Mobil moved in. When the Kashagan field was discovered in 2000, the government invited BG to form a consortium with Eni, Royal Dutch/ Shell, ExxonMobil, Total, Conoco-Phillips and Inpex of Japan to exploit it. That was no easy task. In winter, the shallow waters of this part of the Caspian turn into ice floes that - carried by high winds - can crush conventional offshore rigs. So Agip, the operating arm of Italy's ENI charged...