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24% reduced demand for gasoline during the curfew

24% reduced demand for gasoline during the curfew February 27, 2021 Anwar Gasim, researcher in the Climate and Environment Program at the King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC). RIYADH Anwar Gasim, a researcher in the Climate and Environment Program at the King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC), revealed that the demand for kerosene decreased by 46% and gasoline by 24% in March 2020 compared with the same month in 2019, due to the COVID-19 restriction measures that Saudi Arabia had taken in that month. He explained to the Al-Watan newspaper that the demand for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), diesel, fuel oil and other oil products did not change during that period. LPG is used in the residential sector and in bakeries as cooking gas, and in the petrochemical sector as feedstock.

S&P Global Platts Signs Fellowship Agreement with KAPSARC

S&P Global Platts Signs Fellowship Agreement with KAPSARC USA - English Share this article Share this article LONDON, Feb. 23, 2021 /PRNewswire/ S&P Global Platts, the leading independent provider of information and benchmark prices for the commodities and energy markets, today announced it has signed a fellowship agreement with KAPSARC, which enables its research fellows to access Platts historical oil, natural gas, liquefied natural gas (LNG), petrochemicals, coal, electricity, renewables and nuclear pricing data to underpin their research across all aspects of energy markets. Established in 2013, the King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC) is a Riyadh-based non-profit institution for independent research into global energy economics. It brings together a n international group of expert researchers, representing more than 20 nationalities, and has established international ties with research institutes, public policy organizations and government instit

The British cemetery home to Middle East poets, politicians and princes

Published date: 28 January 2021 10:32 UTC | Last update: 1 month 2 weeks ago About 30km southwest of London, the commuter town of Woking happens to be home to western Europe s largest cemetery. Its size isn t its only accolade; Brookwood cemetery has also been the resting place of some of the world s prominent thinkers, creators, activists and royalty. They include Edward the Martyr, who briefly ruled the country in the 10th century and whose remains were moved to Brookwood in 1984; John Singer Sargent, the American portrait artist who painted several US presidents; and, for a time, Dodi El-Fayed, the entrepreneur who died in a car crash alongside Princess Diana. 

Al Suwailem: Hydrogen plays an important role in the zero-carbon energy system

Shabaneh: The COVID-19 pandemic enhanced hydrogen initiatives around the world January 23, 2021 KAPSARC’s economic researcher Rami Shabaneh. RIYADH With Saudi Arabia’s endeavor to expand the development of carbon-neutral hydrogen, and its announcement of establishing the largest green ammonia plant in the world, in addition to the Kingdom’s export of the first blue ammonia shipment to Japan, the King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC) published a workshop brief conducted recently by the center in cooperation with Clingendael International Energy Programme (CIEP), and with the participation of 35 experts, to shed light on ways to expand the hydrogen economy and the Kingdom’s role in this field.

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