
Emily Chow
Senior Correspondent at Reuters
@Reuters Senior Energy Correspondent, previously in Shanghai and Kuala Lumpur. she/her [email protected]
Articles
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1 week ago |
zawya.com | Yuka Obayashi |Emily Chow
TOKYO/SINGAPORE - Japan is back in the spotlight for liquefied natural gas producers as the boom in artificial intelligence, rising costs for cleaner energy and a new national energy plan drive appetite for long-term LNG deals. While imports by China, the world's biggest LNG importer, are expected to fall this year, buyers in number two Japan are securing long-term supply deals again, including a potential landmark deal with Qatar.
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1 week ago |
ajot.com | Yuka Obayashi |Emily Chow
Japan is back in the spotlight for liquefied natural gas producers as the boom in artificial intelligence, rising costs for cleaner energy and a new national energy plan drive appetite for long-term LNG deals. While imports by China, the world's biggest LNG importer, are expected to fall this year, buyers in number two Japan are securing long-term supply deals again, including a potential landmark deal with Qatar.
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1 week ago |
ajot.com | Marwa Rashad |Jana Choukeir |Emily Chow
Qatar's gas production at the South Pars field is steady and supply is proceeding normally, it said on Tuesday, after the world's largest gas field was hit by an Israeli airstrike on Saturday, prompting Iran to partially suspend its production. Qatar, the world's third-biggest liquefied natural gas exporter after the U.S. and Australia, shares the South Pars gas field with Iran. "So far, gas supplies are proceeding normally.
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2 weeks ago |
lanacion.com.ar | Arathy Somasekhar |Emily Chow
By Arathy Somasekhar, Emily Chow12 jun (Reuters) - Los precios del petróleo bajaban el jueves, revirtiendo las ganancias logradas a principios de la sesión asiática, mientras los agentes del mercado evaluaban la decisión de EEUU de retirar su personal de Oriente Próximo antes de las conversaciones con Irán sobre la actividad nuclear.
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2 weeks ago |
businesslive.co.za | Arathy Somasekhar |Emily Chow
Houston/Singapore — Oil prices eased on Thursday, reversing gains made earlier in the Asian trading session, as market participants assessed a US decision to move personnel from the Middle East ahead of talks with Iran over the latter’s nuclear-related activity. Brent crude futures were down 30c, or 0.4%, to $69.47 a barrel at 4.33am GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate crude was 23c lower, or 0.3%, at $67.92 a barrel.
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