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Purchase CERA Reports Online
Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA), an IHS company, is a leading advisor to international energy companies, governments, financial institutions, and technology providers. Our independent research covers all major energy sectors— oil and refined products, natural gas, electric power, and technology—on a global and regional basis. CERA uniquely offers clients an integrated framework across industries and regions, enabling us to offer new insights and ideas, often well ahead of conventional wisdom—and to provide a comprehensive "early warning system" for decision makers.
CERA Reports Online features select research reports from CERA's suite of Advisory Services. Membership in Advisory Services includes a continuous flow of written reports, access to our energy experts, and interaction with peers in the energy industry at events worldwide. These select reports, normally restricted to access by members of our services, are being made available for individual purchase. Should you be interested in learning more about enrolling in our services, please contact us.
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CERA reports are available in PDF format for immediate download following your purchase, and are grouped into the following major categories:
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CERA in the News
Cambridge Energy Research Continues making news with ground breaking studies, insightful research and industry events. Among the places you can find out more:
By Jun Yang and Gurdeep Singh
Gulf Times, December 29, 2007
Major Pakistan oil, gas and power projects are clearly at risk in the wake of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination. “We can expect immediate impact for energy projects such as the Trans-Afghanistan pipeline and the Iran-Pakistan-India natural gas pipeline, which could be shelved as the government struggles to maintain internal security,” said Chietigj Bajpaee, a research analyst at London-based consultancy Global Insight. However, it is estimated that "...the implications won’t be that significant for LNG,” according to John Harris, director of global LNG at Cambridge Energy Research Associates.
Gulf Times, December 28, 2007
Oil prices of near $100 per barrel caused alarm in consuming countries in 2007 and analysts forecast another tense crude market next year with triple-figure records a real prospect. From a low point of just below $50 per barrel in January, prices doubled in 2007, hitting $99.29 a barrel on November 21, an all-time record. “People at the beginning of this year would never have dreamt that prices would have reached such exalted heights,” said a London-based analyst for the Centre for Global Energy Studies, Leo Drollas.
By Andrew Mickey
CommodityOnline, December 27, 2007
This is one of the most exciting times to be an investor. The world has changed and opportunities are opening up all over the world. And right now there are three massive trends that will be, hands down, the best place to have your money in 2008. The first and probably biggest trend is agriculture. One of the other truly massive opportunities we’re looking at really getting a head of steam in 2008 is liquefied natural gas (LNG). Michael Stoppard, director of global LNG at Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) claims that LNG is “the next truly global energy business opportunity.”
Daily Policy Digest, December 19, 2007
Peak oil advocates claim that the world is running out of oil unless the West gives up its energy-consuming lifestyle. Like global warming and population-bomb Malthusianism, it's essentially junk science because it operates on a static model. Crucially, it leaves out the politics of whether oil companies are allowed to discover or not, says Investor's Business Daily (IBD).
By Clifford Krauss
CheckBiotech, December 18, 2007
Congress is on the verge of writing into law one of the most ambitious dictates ever issued to American business: to create, from scratch, a huge new industry capable of converting agricultural wastes and other plant material into automotive fuel. Energy experts express wonderment at the scope of the new mandates and the short timelines, 5 to 15 years, for achieving them. “Congress is making the assumption that the technology will appear,” said Aaron Brady, an ethanol expert at Cambridge Energy Research Associates. “To make billions of gallons of next-generation biofuels, a lot of things have to go right within the space of only a few years.”
United Press International, December 9, 2007
Experts predict many key oil suppliers, such as Mexico, may require imports to offset rising internal energy demands, further straining global oil markets. "Ten years from now, world capacity to produce oil could be 20 percent higher than today," Daniel Yergin, chairman of Cambridge Energy Research Associates, said in the Times. "But a lot will depend on how the geopolitics work out."
By Shakir Husain
Gulf News, December 05, 2007
POil prices are expected to remain volatile as long as factors such as US-Iran tensions and the financial market turmoil that followed the American housing mortgage market crisis do not go away, an industry expert said on Tuesday. "Iran continues to be a factor in oil prices and will continue to be a factor. There is also concern about the [weak] dollar," Yergin told Gulf News in an interview on the sidelines of the International Petro-leum Technology Conference in Dubai. A confrontation will not be good for the oil market and the global economy," he added.
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