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Thursday, 26 November 2009 01:20 UAE time
  


Results 1 - 9 of about 9 for iran election (0.095 seconds)

Iran in focus

... up salaries. Much hope for the nation's energy industry, according to Ciszuk, will be pinned on the presidential elections of both the US and Iran. "I think, from an IOC point of view, everyone is waiting for two things to happen right now. They are first waiting to see what US policies will be ...
Iran GTL project very much on track, Sasol tells OGME

... Iran until “next year or so.” Iran is expected to be Sasol’s third GTL plant after Qatar and Nigeria, where projects are nearing completion. The election of conservative ... GTL project is being undertaken in association with the state oil company. Iran’s South Pars field has the world’s largest gas ...
Dividing up the prize - Iraqi oil

... Washington’s powerful Israeli lobby. The combination of a possible Israel-Iran showdown, and the election of a Shia-dominated and perhaps pro-Iranian parliament in Baghdad, complicates calculating the Iraq investment risk. Iran’s president wants to “wipe Israel off the map” and go nuclear. Israeli ...
India pushes for extra LNG

... told Oil&Gas Middle East that negotiations are still underway, with Iran and India yet to agree on a price. India wants a total of 7. ... 2.5 million tonnes dependent on talks. The election of the new government in Iran could further delay the deal, Ahmad said. He also said the Indian government ...
Which way is ‘Big Oil’ headed?

Here is an apparent contradiction. After a couple of years of high oil prices, the world's leading private oil companies are raking in record profits. In 2006 the five top US and Western European companies reported an all-time record of US $120 billion in profits, equivalent in size to Ireland's ...
Brave, bold experiments

... government is using its newfound autonomy to let small foreign firms drill for oil and gas within its borders.Nor are more economically conservative Iran and Saudi Arabia being left out—they are privatising their petrochemical sectors. As Middle Eastern nations join the World Trade Organisation they ...
Brave, bold experiments

... government is using its newfound autonomy to let small foreign firms drill for oil and gas within its borders.Nor are more economically conservative Iran and Saudi Arabia being left out—they are privatising their petrochemical sectors.As Middle Eastern nations join the World Trade Organisation they ...
Kuwait’s oil and ballots

... . Parliamentarians can also refuse to recognise the emir-appointed cabinet, forcing him to either replace his ministers or dissolve parliament to call an election.One of his first major acts was to do the latter and call fresh elections in which women could vote—a right that he promoted, as prime ...
Are foreign firms the good guys or the bad guys?

... de facto decided in Washington--and women standing for election in chambers of commerce are signs of the times. And more is to come: On the horizon is the sight ... and women on it.Saudi Arabia has also allowed women to stand for election on chambers of commerce, and Kuwait granted them full political ...

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