Capturing and burying CO2 is heralded as the technological fix to mitigate climate change. But many oil and gas majors are using the technology to produce more fossil fuels.
DUBAI: An Israeli medical technology company has partnered with a Dubai distributor to sell heart failure monitors in the UAE. Netanya-based Sensible Medical, which pioneered the ReDS device that can assess heart failure status, has signed a partnership with Dubai’s Heart Beat Medical to distribute the technology. The company claims the technology can reduce up to 79 percent
CHENNAI: As dystopian dramas go, “Chaos Walking” makes a fair attempt at bringing a strange reality to the silver screen but is let down by heavy-handed story-telling and a weak script.
Viewers are transported to a world populated exclusively by men perhaps the only novel aspect of the film as the women have all been killed. It is in this bizarre reality that director Doug Liman sets his adventure in 2257 AD.
Rather than the usual flying cars and slick tech that so often populates futuristic films, we see a return to primitive life with unpaved roads and men riding horseback. What is unique to this place is “noise” one can hear others’ thoughts. A few have learnt to control this, though not one young man, Todd Hewitt, played by Tom Holland.
DUBAI: ALBAIK, one of Saudi Arabia’s favorite homegrown brands, is coming to Dubai. The popular restaurant chain will open a new branch in Dubai Mall, which will bring ALBAIK’s range of dishes to Emiratis for the first time.
ALBAIK was established in Jeddah in 1974 and has grown to more than 120 branches throughout Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.
It has been listed by CNN as one of the best eight fast-food chains around the world. ALBAIK has developed a community of fanatics across Saudi Arabia, driving the brand’s popularity.
ALBAIK recently opened the world’s first eight-lane drive through with its food trucks in the Saudi city of Tabuk that attracted a queue of cars stretching more than four kilometers.
(Bloomberg) Libya has cut crude production by nearly 20% due to maintenance at its largest oil field and leaks on pipelines linking other desert deposits to the Mediterranean coast.
The OPEC producer began reducing output at fields operated by the Waha Oil Co.