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WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y., March 11, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) The Board of Directors of National Fuel Gas Company (NYSE:NFG) today approved payment of a regular quarterly dividend of 44.5 cents per share on the Company’s common stock. The dividend is payable April 15, 2021, to stockholders of record at the close of business on March 31, 2021. The Company has approximately 91.2 million shares of common stock outstanding. It has no preferred stock outstanding.
At the Annual Meeting of Stockholders, held today, the Company announced preliminary results of the stockholder vote on four management proposals. All were approved, including the election of David H. Anderson, David P. Bauer, Barbara M. Baumann, and Rebecca Ranich as directors for terms to expire in 2024; the advisory vote on named executive officer compensation; the approval of an amendment of the Restated Certificate of Incorporation to declassify the Board of Directors; and the ratification of the ap
Print article In my Feb. 21 op-ed “A day without oil is a nightmare,” I neglected to mention that I definitely support the transition from hydrocarbons to green energy. The March 4 ADN letter referencing my piece was respectful. But in the comments section that appears online, I was raked over the coals for being an “oily” hell bent on destroying the environment. But even though I accept fault for the omission, the harsh online reaction was indicative of how tribal people are today in their opinions. For many, we live in a bipolar, “them” and “us” society. You’re either liberal or conservative, good or bad, “greenie”or an “oily,” with no room for moderate, reasoned thinking.
EP President Sassoli, Prime Minister of Portugal Costa and Commission President von der Leyen yesterday signed the Joint Declaration on the Conference on the Future of Europe.
Libya appoints new interim government, following UN-led roadmap
10 Mar, 2021 11:59 PM
4 minutes to read
Libyans mark the 10th anniversary of their 2011 uprising that led to the overthrow and killing of longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi in Martyrs Square, Tripoli. Photo / AP
Libyans mark the 10th anniversary of their 2011 uprising that led to the overthrow and killing of longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi in Martyrs Square, Tripoli. Photo / AP
AP
By: Rami Musa and Samy Magdy
Libyan lawmakers confirmed a newly appointed interim government today, in the hope it will help unify the divided, war-wrecked North African country, and shepherd it through to elections at the end of the year.