Oct 7 (Reuters) - Chevron is selling its assets in Athabasca Oil Sands and Duvernay Shale to Canadian Natural Resources for $6.5 billion, the oil giant said on Monday as it puts in motion its ...
“The natural resources sector certainly is an undervalued strength of our economy,” said Patrick Gill, senior director of the ...
The discount on Western Canada Select (WCS) heavy crude versus the North American benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) ...
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. closed C$6.69 below its 52-week high of C$56.50, which the company achieved on April 10th.
The deal includes Chevron’s 20 per cent interest in the Athabasca Oil Sands Project, and will bring Canadian Natural’s total ...
Stocks fell as traders trimmed their bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts, sending Treasury 10-year yields above 4%. Oil rallied ...
Investments in critical minerals infrastructure are essential to enable Canada to seize the enormous economic opportunity the low-carbon economy presents and to capitalize on our rich mineral ...
Fund managers like Capital Group take massive positions in companies like Canadian Natural because they see a business built ...
The Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund (CMIF) is Natural Resources Canada's flagship program under the Critical Minerals Strategy to support ...
Chevron Canada Ltd., an indirect subsidiary of Chevron, will sell its 20% non-operated interest in the Athabasca Oil Sands ...
Calgary-based emergency physician Dr. Joe Vipond said wildfire smoke contains gases and small particles of pollution known as ...