
Enes Tunagur
Energy Correspondent at Reuters
Energy Correspondent @Reuters covering oil. Views my own.
Articles
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1 week ago |
es-us.finanzas.yahoo.com | Enes Tunagur
Por Enes Tunagur LONDRES, 19 jun (Reuters) - Los precios del petróleo subían el jueves después de que Israel e Irán siguieran intercambiando ataques con misiles durante la noche y de que la postura sobre el conflicto del presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, mantuviera en vilo a los inversores. * Los futuros del crudo Brent subían 1,06 dólares, o un 1,4%, a 77,76 dólares el barril a las 1151 GMT.
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1 week ago |
marketscreener.com | Enes Tunagur
Published on 06/18/2025 at 21:19, updated on 06/19/2025 at 08:13LONDON (Reuters) -Oil prices rose on Thursday after Israel and Iran continued to exchange missile attacks overnight and U.S. President Donald Trump's stance on the conflict kept investors on edge. Brent crude futures rose $1.06, or 1.4%, to $77.76 a barrel by 1151 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude for July was up $1.26, or 1.7%, at $76.40.
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1 week ago |
marketscreener.com | Enes Tunagur
Published on 06/18/2025 at 21:19, updated on 06/19/2025 at 05:55LONDON (Reuters) -Oil prices rose on Thursday after Israel and Iran continued to exchange missile attacks overnight and U.S. President Donald Trump's stance on the conflict kept investors on edge. Brent crude futures rose 36 cents, or 0.5%, to $77.06 a barrel by 0913 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude for July was up 54 cents, or 0.7%, at $75.68.
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1 week ago |
businesslive.co.za | Alex Lawler |Enes Tunagur
London — Global oil demand will keep growing until around the end of this decade despite peaking in top importer China in 2027, as cheaper petrol and slower electric vehicle adoption in the US support consumption, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Tuesday. The IEA, which advises industrialised countries, did not change its prediction that demand will peak by 2029, but sees China demand peaking earlier due to growth in electric vehicles.
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1 week ago |
kfgo.com | Enes Tunagur
By Enes TunagurLONDON (Reuters) -Stricter environmental regulations and slower global economic growth will soften marine fuel demand in the coming years, the International Energy Agency said in its annual report on Tuesday. Marine fuel sales jumped last year due to Red Sea disruptions that made shipping companies take longer routes.
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Mediterranean Emission Control Area helps bring more heavy sweet Doba crude to Europe as simple refiners try to produce more ultra low sulphur fuel oil https://t.co/zVSnMXQYDP

RT @ReutersCommods: Turkey’s top refiner Tupras stops Russian crude purchases after sanctions https://t.co/FiM6GlODa6

RT @ReutersCommods: EU's cleaner marine fuel rules are inflationary, shipbrokers say https://t.co/vMgxPJxuh2