World Cup 2026 set to pump US$41b into global GDP, lifting hotels, airlines and retail
PARIS, June 6 — The 2026 Fifa World Cup will inject billions of dollars into host economies, driven by a massive c...
"PUMP" · 총 122건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 88,960건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.2(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,335건(4.9%)·중립 82,454건(92.7%)·부정 2,171건(2.4%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.9(중도 균형)입니다.
PARIS, June 6 — The 2026 Fifa World Cup will inject billions of dollars into host economies, driven by a massive c...
Rwanda's RURA announces new maximum retail pump prices for petrol and diesel, reflecting global market shifts while aiming to stabilise public transport costs.
OBSERVERS across the world have long questioned the utility of Donald Trump’s now three-month-old war on Iran. But a growing number of voices from within the US president’s Republican party are saying that this futile and illegal conflict must end. A resolution calling for the withdrawal of US troops from Iran passed narrowly in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives recently, with four members of the US leader’s own party backing the resolution. The move has expectedly incensed Mr Trump, who called it “unpatriotic”. Since the start of the war, most American lawmakers had only mildly been criticising the joint US-Israeli attack on the Islamic Republic. But now, with US mid-term elections in November inching closer, both Republican and Democratic lawmakers want to avoid the voters’ wrath at the ballot box. Like people around the world, Americans are also paying high prices at the petrol pump and rising energy prices have sparked a global spike in inflation. Many Americans are rightly asking why they are paying the price — in blood and treasure — to protect Israeli militarism. Moreover, the feeling that this misadventure must be brought to a close echoes across the American political spectrum. For example, House Democrats have called for an end to the “deeply unpopular and illegal war of choice”, while many conservative Republicans, including the MAGA wing, have lashed out against getting tangled in another ‘forever’ war. Only Israel and its hard-line Zionist supporters in the US have an interest in keeping the Iranian front open. Most other people of the world, including level-headed Americans, want a swift end to the war. But the problem is that Mr Trump does not seem to have a workable game plan to extricate himself from this quagmire. For three months, he has been unable to bring to heel a militarily and economically much weaker foe. It was clear from day one that this mission was doomed to fail, and the reasons for attacking Iran kept changing. At times it was said that the Islamic Republic was being punished for its supposed crushing of internal dissent, at others it was to keep the world ‘safe’ from the Iranian nuclear ‘threat’. All of these were flimsy pretexts for what was in reality an imperial mission to punish an unyielding foe, and forward the Israeli agenda for perpetual regional chaos. Mr Trump must listen to what his own lawmakers are saying. Instead of further escalation, he should, in all earnestness, work towards reaching a long-term ceasefire with Iran that Pakistan and other regional states are pushing for. The deal must promise respect for sovereignty of all regional states, while all the Gulf’s littoral states should work together for a mutual security agreement without the interference of outsiders. Published in Dawn, June 6th, 2026
🌉 A runway for a Louis Vuitton show, covered entirely in fabric as part of two artistic installations, home to a now-demolished water pump... the oldest bridge in Paris, Pont Neuf, has seen it all. Why, then, does its name translate to "New Bridge"? FRANCE 24's Tanishk Saha explains.
DoE wants to keep 13 coal-fired power generators going at the same time as funding nuclear research
New Delhi: State-run oil companies will sell E85 fuel — a blend of 85% ethanol and 15% petrol — at a discount of Rs 20 per litre to offset the biofuel’s lower energy content, Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Friday after inaugurating an E85 dispensing facility at a Delhi petrol pump.The government plans to roll out E85 fuel in phases, with 500 fuel stations targeted by the end of this year and 5,000 by the end of 2027 across India, Puri said.Indian Oil already has a network of 400 fuel stations that can dispense E100 fuel, or pure ethanol with no mix of petrol, across Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu.Also Read: India to launch E85 fuel today in push for flex fuel mobilityEthanol’s energy content is about one-third lower than that of petrol. To compensate for this, E85 users will receive a Rs 20 per litre discount compared with E20, the regular fuel blend sold across the country that contains 20% ethanol and 80% petrol.The E20 blend will continue to be available at all fuel stations, as most vehicles currently on Indian roads can use blends of up to 20% ethanol.In recent days, Maruti Suzuki and Hero MotoCorp have each launched one vehicle model capable of running on E85 fuel.The simultaneous rollout of compatible vehicles and fuel dispensing infrastructure will help accelerate E85 adoption, Puri said, adding that there was a “pretty compelling case” for shifting to E85 because it would be cheaper, lower emissions and reduce dependence on fuel imports.
A group of people allegedly charged him with stealing a motor pump, then beat him with sticks, and also resorted to kicks and punches in a village in Hansi district; police said an investigation was under way to apprehend the accused
Petrol pumps in parts of Noida and Ghaziabad are running out of fuel by night, forcing purchase limits. Here's what's behind the disruption and whether there is a shortage
An oil pump jack is seen in Artesia, New Mexico, US, April 6, 2023. — ReutersStrait of Hormuz traffic remains limited amid conflict.Iranian oil exports fall to lowest level in six years.OPEC secretary general says oil demand to remain robust.SINGAPORE: Oil prices were...
Recent pump price rollbacks help bring inflation down, but the year-to-date average is 4.5%, still above the government's target range
India is set to significantly expand its ethanol dispensing stations, with 500 planned by December and 5,000 by 2027, to boost flex-fuel vehicle adoption. This initiative, marked by the launch of Maruti Suzuki's WagonR flex-fuel car, aims to reduce fuel imports. The government is implementing supportive measures including pricing incentives and infrastructure development.
Crews have begun refilling the Reflecting Pool near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington after weeks of renovations. “We cleaned it. We fumigated it,” President Donald Trump said of the Lincoln Memorial. “We had 10 major truck dumpsters of garbage taken out. Can you believe it?” The pool’s basin was resurfaced with a blue coating. Trump […]
Die EU-Kommission will zur Förderung von Wärmepumpen und E-Autos mehr Schulden erlauben. Davon würden vor allem Südländer profitieren. Die Freude der Energie-Lobbyisten in Deutschland dürfte dagegen verfrüht sein.
A drop in oil prices has delivered welcome relief at the pump.
A view shows an oil pump jack outside Almetyevsk in the Republic of Tatarstan, Russia June 4, 2023. — ReutersBrent drops 0.89%, WTI down 0.81% after recent gains.Trump says Iran talks could see movement by this weekend.Iran says contacts with Washington remain open but stalled.<p...
The debate over these chemical substances is being reignited within the European Union, as machines designed to help adapt to climate change come under fire, historian Jean-Baptiste Fressoz notes in his column for Le Monde.
Ukraine's High Anti-Corruption Court has imposed a preventive measure on a suspect accused of organizing a scheme to embezzle nearly UAH 170 million from Energoatom during the construction of a critical infrastructure facility in the Mykolaiv region – the Tashlyk Pumped Storage Power Plant.
Ukraine's High Anti-Corruption Court has imposed a preventive measure on a suspect accused of organizing a scheme to embezzle nearly UAH 170 million from Energoatom during the construction of a critical infrastructure facility in the Mykolaiv region – the Tashlyk Pumped Storage Power Plant.
At the start of 2026, oil traders were preparing for a glut. Supply growth was expected to outpace demand growth. OPEC+ was gradually returning barrels to the market. U.S. production remained near record highs. Economic growth was slowing, while electrification and efficiency gains were expected to temper consumption growth. The consensus view was simple: the world was heading into a period of excess supply. Six months later, that narrative never came true. Not because the world suddenly ran out of oil. In fact, many major producers are pumping…