When energy leaders get together, I’m struck by their relentless, courageous problem-solving.
Climate hawks argue that nothing must stop the significant expansion of utility-scale renewables, particularly wind and solar generation.
I want to liberate you from a burden: You are no longer obligated to change anyone’s mind about the oil and gas industry.
In a world that needs more energy than ever before, every type of energy company faces the same challenge: getting projects permitted and built in an increasingly contentious community and stakeholder engagement climate. The weird thing: Oil and gas companies—not startups, not clean tech—may be best suited to running this gantlet. In this Nuts & …
But do you know what they want for their energy futures? Because your vision needs to be founded on their aspirations (not just yours) for them to see it as credible and compelling. This is the hidden law of energy leadership today: To effectively communicate, speak with your stakeholders, not at or past them.
Get a quick overview of what CDR is, how it’s relevant to your company’s real sustainability strategy, and why burgeoning opposition doesn’t want to see oil and gas companies anywhere near this important solution.
Community and eNGO pushback is increasingly preventing implementation of low-carbon projects across the United States. Community and EJ engagement, when done right, is an essential risk management tool.
Adamantine Energy CEO Tisha Schuller joined the Capitol Crude podcast for a conversation with S&P Global Commodity Insights senior reporter Bill Holland about fundamentally changing the way the oil and gas industry engages with a skeptical public.
Carbon offsets can be a useful component of a company’s decarbonization strategy. If done poorly, carbon offsets can undermine the efficacy and integrity of a company’s decarbonization efforts and leadership.
It may feel as if anti-ESG pressure is growing and will fundamentally reshape expectations of your company. Yet the directional drivers that having an ESG strategy answers haven’t gone anywhere.
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By Tisha Schuller