The northernmost town in the world, Longyearbyen, is 800 miles from the North Pole, but home to over 2,000 people.
Geothermal energy is making a comeback as engineers unlock deep-earth heat with new drilling and closed-loop technologies.
China needs to have better technology and a bigger say in the international maritime order if it is to win the global deep-sea mining race for critical minerals, according to a senior official from ...
Turkey began drilling at a second borehole in a Black Sea natural gas field where it made its largest ever discovery earlier this year, Energy Minister Fatih Donmez said on Thursday.
The projects to be presented also include a subsea cluster manifold, a marine remotely operated vehicle for independent seismic exploration, a deep-sea exploration drilling system ...
Following the opening of Expedition Odyssey earlier this year, SeaWorld Orlando is now teasing the release of yet another new attraction for wannabe aquatic explorers. While the park has yet to reveal ...
After half a dozen hours in the earliest moments of the upcoming pirate RPG Sea of Remnants, I was left with tons of questions about how this one will ultimately turn out, whether it was the currently ...
WARSAW, Sept 19 (Reuters) - Two Russian fighter jets violated the safety zone of the Petrobaltic drilling platform in the Baltic sea, Polish Border Guards said on Friday, adding that the Armed Forces ...
The path to the world’s technological future could be found on the deep ocean floor. But that path may come at a high price. The debate centers on critical minerals embedded in rocks on the seabed.
Is it downright adorable, or is it so ugly it's cute? Either way, this newly discovered pink fish has the makings to survive in one of the darkest, coldest places on earth, and its pink, bumpy face is ...
Equinor ASA EQNR, a Norwegian integrated energy company, has secured drilling permits from the Norwegian Offshore Directorate to drill two wildcat wells in the North Sea. Wildcat wells are exploratory ...
North Sea drilling engineers typically earn, per year (total cash), about £55,000–£170,000 in the UK sector and NOK 800,000–2,200,000 in the Norwegian sector, depending on experience and allowances.