Search Site

TAQA Q1 net income $571m

Net income fell $2.58bn due to one-off items recognized in 2023.

QatarEnergy buys stake in Egypt blocks

It did not disclose the cost of the agreement.

TSMC’s April revenue up 60%

It capitalized on huge wave of demand for chips used in AI hardware.

Etihad reports record Q1 profit

Total revenue increased by $269 million in the same period.

Aramco Q1 profit down 14.5%

Despite lower profit, it will pay $31bn in dividends to Saudi government.

European energy crisis could worsen, warns Qatar minister

Russian invasion of Ukraine and subsequent European sanction on Russian gas sparked energy shortage in Europe. in 2022. (AFP)
  • "The only thing that saved humanity and Europe this year was a warm winter, and the slowdown in the economy," said Qatari Energy Minister
  • "If the economy starts churning back up in (2024) and you have just a regular winter, I think the worst is yet to come," he added

Doha, Qatar – Qatar’s energy minister warned on Tuesday the “worst is yet to come” for Europe’s oil and gas shortages, saying a warm winter had prevented greater difficulties in recent months.

“The only thing that saved humanity and Europe this year was a warm winter, and the slowdown in the economy,” Qatari Energy Minister Saad Al-Kaabi told the Qatar Economic Forum.

“If the economy starts churning back up in (2024) and you have just a regular winter, I think the worst is yet to come.”

After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sparked an energy supply crisis, Europe dodged serious problems this past winter largely because of milder-than-expected temperatures.

But Kaabi and his Saudi counterpart, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, both told the conference that an energy crunch was looming.

“If they don’t realize that and have a proper plan and sit down with producers and oil and gas companies are not demonized, reality will kick in and we’ll have a sensible solution,” Kaabi said.