Clifford Krauss has been a correspondent for The New York Times since 1990. He currently is a national business correspondent based in Houston, covering energy. He covered the State Department, Congress and the New York City police department before serving as Buenos Aires bureau chief and Toronto bureau chief. Before working at The Times, he worked as a foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal and was the Edward R. Murrow fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is author of “Inside Central America: Its People, Politics and History,” (1991). He has published articles in Foreign Affairs, GQ and Wilson Quarterly, along with other publications.
Articles
Gas Tanker Completes Arctic Sea Journey
Accompanied by two Russian icebreakers, the vessel took nine days to complete the trip.
December 6, 2012Report Bolsters the Case for Large U.S. Natural Gas Exports
An Energy Department study concluded that the national economic benefits of significant natural gas exports far outweighed the potential for higher consumer energy prices.
December 6, 2012, ThursdaySouth African Company to Build U.S. Plant to Convert Gas to Liquid Fuels
The plant, to be built by Sasol, a South African company, would produce 96,000 barrels of fuel a day using a “gas to liquids” technology.
December 4, 2012, TuesdayOil Prices Stay Steady Despite Mideast Conflict
While Thanksgiving gas prices in the United States are higher than a year ago and at a record level, oil experts say plentiful global supplies will help prevent a jump in prices.
November 22, 2012, ThursdayGas Crisis Abates, With Rations, Special Deliveries and Refinery’s Return
Several factors contributed to ease the shortage, but Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said the city’s odd-even rationing rules would continue.
November 15, 2012, ThursdayMissed Opportunities and Miscalculations in New York Gas Shortage
The return of 1970s-era gas lines to the five boroughs of New York City was not the result of a single miscalculation, but a combination of ignored warnings and indecisiveness.
November 10, 2012, SaturdayCuba’s Prospects for an Oil-Fueled Economic Jolt Falter With Departure of Rig
The one deepwater rig able to work in Cuban waters is to be removed within weeks, a blow to a nation that had hoped a windfall would save its economy.
November 10, 2012, SaturdayMilitary to Deliver Fuel to Storm-Ravaged Region
With lines at Northeast gas stations persisting, the government turned to the Pentagon for help and eased limits on foreign tankers.
November 3, 2012, SaturdayExxon and Shell Earnings, Hurt by Natural Gas, Are Helped by Refining
Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell reported lackluster third-quarter earnings because of declining oil and natural gas production and weak domestic gas prices, but refinery operations were strong.
November 2, 2012, FridayRefining’s Fortunes Rise in the Energy Industry
Refining, once regarded as a low-margin, accident-prone part of the energy industry, is doing better in part because of cheaper natural gas and domestic crude oil.
October 25, 2012, ThursdaySEARCH 2000 Articles:
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