Should we continue to destroy old oil-industry structures or preserve the thriving coral-reef ecosystems they're supporting?
A late-season hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico could slash U.S. oil production by 4 million barrels, according to researchers.
Shell and Chevron have started returning workers to platforms in the US Gulf of Mexico that were evacuated last week ahead of ...
As of 10 a.m. ET Friday, Rafael was located in the Gulf of Mexico about 230 miles north/northeast from Progreso, Mexico, on the northern coast of the Yucatan peninsula, according to the latest update ...
Hurricane Rafael, now a Category 2 storm, continues as a strong system in the Gulf of Mexico, but the good news is that this slow-moving storm will stay over water and not directly impact any land, ...
Rafael reached a Category Three hurricane status about 24 hours after becoming a tropical storm in the Caribbean Sea on ...
A significant shift in the storm's forecast track means the threat to the US is dwindling, but is increasing for Mexico's ...
The Gulf of Mexico has lower average wind speeds ... It will be years before giant turbines spin alongside oil rigs off the coast of Louisiana, if ever. Luckily for Lofton, offshore wind jobs ...
Rafael will indirectly affect the US Gulf Coast by churning up rough seas over ... personnel to shore and was shutting production at oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico ahead of Rafael's approach.