oil production generically, not to the saudis particularly reporter: will this trip to saudi arabia do anything to lower gas prices in the u.s. the reality is that saudi arabia has very limited spare capacity they have to manage it carefully. we shouldn t expect a production increase. certainly nothing on the order of this is going to bring down gasoline prices in the u.s. maura is with the president in delaware right now. saudi arabia is not his only stop on this trip, right, maura reporter: the president will visit israel first with a stop in the west bank to meet with palestinian leaders as well kate maura, thank you. in eastern ukraine tonight the search for survivors is under way after a russian rocket attack on an apartment complex. you can see piles of bricks and rubble. this is one of three buildings destroyed in the area, at least 15 people are dead, another 20 are missing. teams are bringing in cranes and excavators to try to clear the debris and find anyone who m
bring that supply from abroad as quickly as possible to american shelves, that just reflects the intensity, as well. we want to pull every lever we can to get formula here. we ve already seen an increase in production above the levels that we saw before the plant closed down in michigan. there is a production increase. we are seeing an impact. we want more of that. that is why we are pulling more of the levers. we re not going to stop, mika, until every baby has the formula it needs to thrive. all right. u.s. surgeon general dr. vivek murthy, thank you very much for being on this morning. claire mccaskill, i ve got a question for you about women and voting. ultimately, in a lot of elections, it s the women who turn out and save the day. right now, if you are a woman in america, you ve just been through the covid pandemic. maybe you re finally getting your bearings. maybe not. maybe you ve been locked out of the economy for that. you are facing losing a
we ve seen companies across sectors, including in the oil and gas industry, step up to the plate and say they are going to stop doing business with russia, they are going to pull back from the russian economy. we re seeing that across the corporate sector, including in the oil and gas sector. that s something that they should they forgive me, i didn t mean to interrupt. but should they increase production here at home? well, what we re seeing right now is production in the united states is increasing. it s increasing to record levels. you ve heard the ceos of the companies you mentioned saying that they are doing everything they can to increase production in response to the price. so in the short term, we expect and we are seeing that production increase by 700,000 barrels a day in the united states. over the long term, what we need to do is actually reduce our dependence on oil and gas altogether so that we and our allies like those in europe are not as susceptible to the to
production in the united states is increasing. it s increasing to record levels. in the short-term we expect that we are seeing that production increase by about 700,000 barrels a day in the united states. a it s going to go up. [laughter] can t do much right now. russia is responsible. bret: obviously important to point out the gas prices were going up before putin invaded ukraine. but all part of the day s news with oil leading the way. let s bring in our panel harold ford jr. were former tennessee congressman co-host of the five. marc thiessen and former education secretary bill bennett. what could think of this move to ban russian oil and kind of the fallout from whether u.s. production is up or down or going up or down? well, i think it was the right thing to do. this is blood soaked oil. nevertheless, the president s
A mining company has flagged the destruction of a sacred Gulf Country hill. Is it Queensland’s own Juukan Gorge disaster, or a chance to raise a community out of poverty?