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Saudi Aramco IPO – an upside for the climate?

YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQDMOSbJtqrtNzif5rS22OQ

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http://www.slideshare.net/economistintelligenceunit

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https://www.pinterest.com/theeiu/

Energy efficiency and energy savings

Research Methodology

Big spenders

Research Methodology

Our research drew on two main initiatives. A global survey of senior executives was conducted in October and November 2011, involving 185 executives from a range of companies across the oil and gas industry. These executives were very senior: one in three was a CEO or managing director of their company. To complement the findings of the survey, a series of interviews was carried out with leading industry figures between October and December 2011.

Empowering growth

IT and the Environment: A new item on the CIO’s agenda?

The blue economy

Intelligent manufacturing: Targeting better energy efficiency

Measuring the soft costs of cybercrime: a hard problem in need of a solution

Cyberattacks come in many forms, and each can entail soft costs of different kinds and magnitudes. Cyberthieves could steal sensitive personal data, taking the trust of current and future customers with them. “Hacktivists” could immobilize a website, causing customer frustration and bad press. Competitors could lift product designs and take over the market with low-cost copies. And hostile nations could disrupt or destroy services and facilities vital to a healthy economy.

What’s in a number? Estimating the cost of cybercrime

If you need to understand property crime in the US, visit the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s website. Its Uniform Crime Report will tell you how many offenses were committed nationally in 2011 (9,063,173) and of what type (burglary 24%, larceny 68% and motor vehicle theft 7.9%). It will also give you an estimate of how much property crime cost the US economy that year ($15.6bn).

Nurturing energy innovation

Global Energy Conversation III

Research Methodology 

To support the research, the Economist Intelligence Unit conducted a global survey in September 2012 of 731 senior executives from a range of industries to gauge their views on ways to stimulate energy innovation. Half of respondents are from firms with US$500 million or more in global annual revenue. The executives participating in the survey were drawn from Europe (22%), North America (20%), Asia-Pacific (19%), Latin America (19%) and Middle East & Africa (19%).

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