Tumgik
#oksana novak
obscenery · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
ihaveathingforwomen · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Hi! My name is Jac, and I thought I'd make this since I'm starting to write a little bit more.
Casey Novak x Alex Cabot Masterlist
Universes Away Masterlist
Characters I will probably write for:
Alex Cabot
Casey Novak
Wanda Maximoff
Natasha Romanoff
Dana Scully
Clarice Starling
Villanelle (Oksana Astankova)
Eve Polastri
Jane Banner
13 notes · View notes
sunskate · 2 years
Text
Ice Dance 2022-23 season
Molly Lanaghan/ Dmitre Razgulajevs (CAN): RD: FD: Micmacs à Tire-Larigot soundtrack by Raphaël Beau- Droit De Cité; Micmacs a la Gare, Saint Eustache, Larrons en Foire
Carolane Soucisse/Shane Firus (CAN): RD: FD: Nahko and Medicine For The People- Aloha Ke Akua
Natalie Taschlerova/Filip Taschler (CZE): RD: Shakira- Hips Don't Lie; Enrique Iglesius- Hero FD: Max Richter- On the Nature of Daylight; Ludovico Einaudi- Run; Jacob Shea, Jasha Klebe- Early Morning Fog (coaches: Matteo Zanni, Barbora Reznickova; choreo: Matteo Zanni)
Yuka Orihara/Juho Pirinen (FIN): RD: Cardi B.- I Like it Like That; Klaus Hallen Tanzorchester- Dancing with a Stranger; Instruction
Eleanor Hirst/Anthony Currie (GBR): RD: Gypsy Kings- Hotel California FD: Evita (coaches: ?)
Jennifer Janse van Rensburg/Benjamin Steffan (GER): RD: J Balvin, Pharrell Williams- Safari; Pentatonix- Havana; Reel 2 Real- Move It FD: Balazs Havasi- Prelude Age of Heroes (coaches: Rostislav Sinicyn, Natalia Karamyseva; choreo: Mariia Tumanovska-Chaiika)
Charlene Guignard/Marco Fabbri (ITA): RD: Grace Jones- This Is, I'm Crying; Monica Naranjo- Pantera en Libertad
Kana Muramoto/Daisuke Takahashi (JPN): RD: Conga, Rhythm is Gonna Get You, Ahora, Move FD: (choreo: Marina Zoueva, Ilia Tkachenko, Maxim Kozhevnikov, Sarry, 矢内康洋 Randi Strong)
Paulina Ramanauskaite/Deividas Kizala (LTU): RD: Celia Cruz- La Vida Es Un Carnaval; Perez Prado and Rosemary Clooney- Sway; Sergio Mendes- Magalenha FD: AC/DC- Highway to Hell; Gary Moore- Still Got the Blues; AC/DC- Demon Fire (coaches: Maurizio Margaglio, Neil Brown)
Oona Brown/Gage Brown (USA): RD: Imagine Dragons, Tony Evans and his Orchestra, Gnarls Barkley- Bones FD: Annie Lennox- Big Sky; Joe Bonamassa- No Good Place for the Lonely (coaches and choreo: Inese Bucevica, Joel Dear)
Lorraine McNamara/Anton Spirodinov (USA): RD: George Michael- Careless Whisper, arr. Hugo Chouinard FD: Ezio Bosso- Rain in Your Black Eyes (coaches: Alexei Kiliakov, Elena Novak, Jimmie Manners; choreo: Novak, Manners)
Eva Pate/Logan Bye (USA): RD: Rio- Barbatuques- Beautiful Creatures; Jamie Foxx- Fly Love; Rio singers- Real in Rio FD: Riverdance- Bill Whelan- Reel Around the Sun (coaches: Igor Shpilband, Pasquale Camerlengo, Natalia Deller, Adrienne Lenda; choreo: Igor Shpilband, Pasquale Camerlengo, Renee Petkovski, Oksana Zolotarevskaya, Zachary Donohue)
2 notes · View notes
storyofwhoiam · 2 years
Note
🎰
SEND ME 🎰 AND I’LL RANDOMISE OUR MUSE LISTS AND GIVE THE FIRST FIVE AS POSSIBLE CONNECTIONS ! @ardentsolis
Yelena Belova & John Rowland — Look, John would just be the complete epitome of the "Well, mark me down as scared and horny" meme. He would be entirely intimidated and I think it would be hilarious (though if we're honest this is probably true about most of your ladies)
Leah Clearwater & Alice Quinn — I don't know Leah but her wiki says she's the only known female shape-shifter, and I just think Alice would find that cool
Oksana Petrova & Julia Wicker — If Julia knew about the Red Room, she'd be all about trying to bring it down
Warren Bishop & Patsy Mount — They meet in hospital when Patsy's still working as a nurse on the surgical wards, rather than as a midwife
Toph Beifong & Margo Hanson — Just about the only thing that I know about Avatar: The Last Airbender is that I think there are different kingdoms? Seems feasible to me that whichever one Toph belongs to could end up in Fillory, or Margo ends up on some sort of quest that leads her to Toph
Susan Storm & Lucy Lane — DCU/MCU crossover, the Fantastic 4 work alongside the DEO
Risa Tano & Catia Lucas — Oh, Catia would absolutely just think that she was the most fascinating
Alex Bishop & Allie Novak — Allie is absolutely in need of legal help, and would flirt shamelessly
2 notes · View notes
costyaklein · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
С известным писателем Оксаной Новак, автором бестселлера «Приключения пышки на сайте знакомств» в Хельсинки несколько лет назад #оксанановак #новакоксана #писатель #приключенияпышки With the famous writer Oksana Novak, author of the bestselling book “Adventures of Muffins on a dating site” in Helsinki a few years ago #oxananovac #novakoksana #writer #adventures (at Helsinki) https://www.instagram.com/p/B3B-rlWJ7li/?igshid=twxjixelo9m4
0 notes
ESPY Awards 2017: The Complete Winners List
The 25th annual ESPY Awards celebrated the best in sports on Wednesday night, with a star-studded list of nominees including Serena Williams, Tom Brady, Simone Biles and more. Hosted by Peyton Manning, the sports award show was held at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles. 
Check out all the big winners below:
Best Male Athlete Kris Bryant, MLB Sidney Crosby, NHL Michael Phelps, Swimming Russell Westbrook, NBA *WINNER*
Best Female Athlete Simone Biles, Gymnastics *WINNER* Katie Ledecky, Swimming Candace Parker, WNBA Serena Williams, Tennis
Best Championship Performance Tom Brady, Super Bowl Kevin Durant, NBA Finals *WINNER* Shay Knighten, WCWS Deshaun Watson, CFB National Championship
Best Breakthrough Athlete Giannis Antetokounmpo, NBA Laurie Hernandez, Gymnastics Aaron Judge, MLB Dak Prescott, NFL *WINNER* Christian Pulisic, Soccer
Best Record-Breaking Performance Bill Belichick most Super Bowl wins by a head coach Michael Phelps extends his own record of most gold medals/most Olympic medals *WINNER* Diana Taurasi breaks WNBA career scoring record Russell Westbrook most triple doubles in a season
Best Upset Clemson defeats Alabama, CFB National Championship Denis Istomin over Novak Djokovic, Australian Open 2nd Round Mississippi State defeats Connecticut, Women's NCAA Basketball Final Four *WINNER*
Best Game Cubs vs. Indians, World Series Game 7 Patriots vs. Falcons, Super Bowl *WINNER* Federer vs. Nadal, Australian Open Final
Best Comeback Athlete Matt Bush, MLB Roger Federer, Tennis Jordy Nelson, NFL *WINNER* Candace Parker, WNBA
Best Play Julian Edelman Super Bowl catch vs. 16. Noah Brown TD catch around defender Morgan Williams buzzer beater vs. UConn vs.15. Larry Nance dunk Aaron Rodgers to Jared Cook *WINNER* vs. 14. Lamar Jackson hurdles defender Northwestern buzzer beater vs. 13. Edwin Encarnacion walk off HR Russell Westbrook buzzer beater vs. 12. LeBron James dunk off the backboard Chris Coghlan leaps over catcher vs. 11. Sidney Crosby one-handed goal Olivier Giroud scorpion kick goa l vs. 10. Warriors jump ball transition dunk Mario Mandzukic goal in UEFA Final vs. 9. Jarrod Dyson catch
Best Team Chicago Cubs, MLB Clemson Tigers, CFB Golden State Warriors, NBA *WINNER* Pittsburgh Penguins, NHL New England Patriots, NFL South Carolina Gamecocks, Women's NCAA Basketball US Women's Gymnastics
Best International Athlete Canelo Alvarez, Boxing Usain Bolt, Track & Field *WINNER* Katinka Hosszu, Swimming Conor McGregor, MMA Cristiano Ronaldo, Soccer
Best NFL Player Tom Brady, New England Patriots Ezekiel Elliott, Dallas Cowboys Khalil Mack, Oakland Raiders Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Packers *WINNER* Matt Ryan, Atlanta Falcons
Best MLB Player Kris Bryant, Chicago Cubs David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox Rick Porcello, Boston Red Sox Max Scherzer, Washington Nationals Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels *WINNER*
Best NHL Player Sergei Bobrovsky, Columbus Blue Jackets Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins *WINNER* Patrick Kane, Chicago Blackhawks Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers
Best Driver Ron Capps, NHRA Lewis Hamilton, Formula One *WINNER* Jimmie Johnson, NASCAR Simon Pagenaud, IndyCar Martin Truex Jr., NASCAR
Best NBA Player Kevin Durant, Golden State Warriors James Harden, Houston Rockets LeBron James, Cleveland Cavaliers *WINNER* Kawhi Leonard, San Antonio Spurs Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City Thunder
Best WNBA Player Tina Charles, New York Liberty Elena Delle Donne, Washington Mystics Maya Moore, Minnesota Lynx Nneka Ogwumike, Los Angeles Sparks Candace Parker, Los Angeles Sparks *WINNER*
Best Fighter Terence Crawford, Boxing Gennady Golovkin, Boxing Demetrious Johnson, MMA *WINNER* Conor McGregor, MMA Andre Ward, Boxing
Best Male Golfer Brooks Koepka Sergio Garcia *WINNER* Dustin Johnson Rory McIlroy Henrik Stenson
Best Female Golfer In Gee Chun Ariya Jutanugarn *WINNER* Lydia Ko So Yeon Ryu Lexi Thompson
Best Male Tennis Player Roger Federer *WINNER* Andy Murray Rafael Nadal Stan Wawrinka
Best Female Tennis Player Angelique Kerber Jelena Ostapenko Monica Puig Serena Williams *WINNER*
Best Male College Athlete Ian Harkes, Wake Forest soccer Frank Mason, Kansas basketball Matt Rambo, Maryland lacrosse Zain Retherford, Penn State wrestling DeShaun Watson, Clemson football *WINNER*
Best Female College Athlete Inky Ajanaku, Stanford volleyball Kelly Barnhill, Florida softball *WINNER* Kadeisha Buchanan, West Virginia soccer Kelsey Plum, Washington basketball Zoe Stukenberg, Maryland lacrosse
Best Male Action Sports Athlete Oystein Braaten, Ski John John Florence, Surf Nyjah Huston, Skateboard Mark McMorris, Snowboard *WINNER*
Best Female Action Sports Athlete Lacey Baker, Skateboard Anna Gasser, Snowboard *WINNER* Kelly Sildaru, Ski Tyler Wright, Surf
Best Jockey Javier Castellano Mike E. Smith John Velasquez *WINNER*
Best Male Athlete With a Disability Will Groulx, Cycling Mike Minor, Snowboarding Steve Serio, Wheelchair Basketball *WINNER* Brad Snyder, Swimming Roderick Townsend, Track and Field
Best Female Athlete With a Disability Oksana Masters, Nordic Skiing Tatyana McFadden, Track and Field Becca Meyers, Swimming *WINNER* Shawn Morelli, Cycling Grace Norman, Triathlon
Best Bowler Jason Belmonte *WINNER* Francois Lavoie EJ Tackett
Best MLS Player Andre Blake, Philadelphia Union Stefan Frei, Seattle Sounders FC Matt Hedges, FC Dallas David Villa, New York City FC *WINNER* Bradley Wright-Phillips, New York Red Bulls
Best Male US Olympic Athlete Ashton Eaton, Decathlon Ryan Murphy, Swimming Michael Phelps, Swimming *WINNER* Kyle Snyder, Wrestling
Best Female US Olympic Athlete Simone Biles, Gymnastics *WINNER* Allyson Felix, Track & Field Katie Ledecky, Swimming Simone Manuel, Swimming
brightcove
0 notes
torentialtribute · 5 years
Text
Wimbledon day seven order of play: Manic Monday
The second week of Wimbledon is a usic and unlike last year, there will be British representation on 'Manic Monday'.
Jo Konta is still going strong following a stirring comeback against Sloane Stephens on Saturday, but her next opponent, Petra Kvitova, will provide another stern test.
Meanwhile, teen sensation Cori Gauff is back in action on Court One, where she faces former world No. 1 Simona Halep.
Elsewhere, Roger Federer Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal are all in action.
" Manic Monday "at Wimbledon will see all Cori Gauff
Order of Play for Monday, July 8, 2019
(Seeds in brackets)
Center Court
13:00: Joao Sousa (Por) v (3) Rafael Nadal (Spa), (19) Johanna Konta (Gbr) v (6) Petra Kvitova (Cze) , (17) Matteo Berrettini (Ita) v (2) Roger Federer (Swi)
Court 1
13:00: (11 ) Serena Williams (USA) v (30) Carla Suarez Navarro (Spa), (7) Simona Halep (Rom) v Cori Gauff (U SA), (1) Novak Djokovic (Ser) v Ugo Humbert (Fra)
Court 2
11:00: (1) Ashleigh Barty (Aus) v Alison Riske (USA), Karolina Muchova (Cze) v (3) Karolina Pliskova (Cze), (8) Kei Nishikori (Jpn) v Mikhail Kukushkin (Kaz)
Court 3
11:00: (8) Elina Svitolina (Ukr) v (24) Petra Martic (Cro), (21) David Goffin (Bel) v Fernando Verdasco (Spa), (26) Guido Pella (Arg) v (15) Milos Raonic (Can)
Court 4
11:00: Baptiste Anselmo (Fra) v (16) Keisuke Saitoh (Jpn), Alexandra Vecic (Ger) v (6) Natsumi Kawaguchi (Jpn), Natan Rodrigues (Bra) v Peter Makk (Hun), (7) Sada Nahimana (Bdi ) v Matilda Mutavdzic (Gbr)
Unlike last year, there are British in week two and they are led by women's No. 1 Johanna Konta
Court 5
11 : 00: Pablo Llamas Ruiz (Spa) v Roman Andres Burruchaga (Arg), Funa Kozaki (Jpn) v (8) Alina Charaeva (Russian), Weronika Baszak (Pol) v Oksana Selekhmeteva (Russian), Daria Frayman ( Russian) v Pia Lovric (Slo)
Court 6
11:00: (9) Mananchaya Sawangkaew (Tha) v Elizabeth Mandlik (Tha) USA), Katrina Scott (USA) f (16) Adrienn Nagy (Hun), Amarissa Kiara Toth (Hun) v (10) Alexa Noel (USA), Priska Madelyn Nugroho (Ina) v Chloe Beck (USA)
Court 7
11:00: Nicolas Alvarez Varona (Spa) v Felix Gill (Gbr), Nicholas David Ionel (Rom) v Jacob Fearnley (Gbr), Polina Kudermetova (Russian) v Amarni Banks (Gbr), Emma Raducanu (Gbr) v Martyna Kubka (Pol)
Court 8
Source link
0 notes
energysolutions · 6 years
Text
Gazprom’s annual General Shareholders Meeting elects new Board of Directors has been published on Energy Solutions News
New Post has been published on http://www.energybrokers.co.uk/news/gazprom/gazproms-annual-general-shareholders-meeting-elects-new-board-of-directors
Gazprom’s annual General Shareholders Meeting elects new Board of Directors
June 29, 2018
Based on the voting results, the annual General Shareholders Meeting of Gazprom formed the Company's Board of Directors composed as follows:
1.
Akimov, Andrey Igorevich
Chairman of the Management Board, Gazprombank (Joint Stock Company)
  2.
Kulibaev, Timur Askarovich
Chairman of the Legal Entities Association “Kazakhstan Association of Oil, Gas and Energy Sector Organizations (KAZENERGY),” Chairman of the Presidium of the National Chamber of Entrepreneurs, Republic of Kazakhstan (Atameken)
  3.
Manturov, Denis Valentinovich
Minister of Industry and Trade of the Russian Federation
  4.
Markelov, Vitaly Anatolyevich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Committee, Gazprom
  5.
Martynov, Viktor Georgievich 
Rector of the Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas (National Research University)
  6.
Mau, Vladimir Alexandrovich
Rector of the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration
  7.
Miller, Alexey Borisovich
Chairman of the Management Committee, Gazprom
  8.
Novak, Alexander Valentinovich
  Minister of Energy of the Russian Federation
  9.
Patrushev, Dmitry Nikolaevich
Minister of Agriculture of the Russian Federation
  10.
Sereda, Mikhail Leonidovich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Committee – Head of the Administration of the Management Committee, Gazprom
  11.
Zubkov, Viktor Alexeevich
Russia's Special Presidential Representative for Cooperation with the Gas Exporting Countries Forum
  The Meeting also elected a new 9-member Audit Commission consisting of:
Bikulov, Vadim Kasymovich;
Fisenko, Tatyana Vladimirovna;
Gladkov, Alexander Alexeevich;
Mironova, Margarita Ivanovna;
Nosov, Yury Stanislavovich;
Oganyan, Karen Iosifovich;
Petrova, Alexandra Andreevna;
Platonov, Sergey Revazovich;
Tarasenko, Oksana Valeryevna.
0 notes
cleopatrarps · 6 years
Text
Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia
MOSCOW (Reuters) – A return to the oil production levels that were in place in October 2016, baseline for the current deal to cut output, is one of the options for easing curbs, Russia’s energy minister said on Saturday.
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak attends a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF), Russia May 25, 2018. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Sources said this week that Saudi Arabia and Russia were discussing raising OPEC and non-OPEC oil production to ease 17 months of strict supply curbs amid concerns that a price rally has gone too far.
“When we extended the agreement until the end of 2018, we spoke about such possibilities (of returning to the October 2016 level),” Novak told reporters.
“But a decision will be made in June,” he added, referring to meetings of OPEC and non-OPEC countries in Vienna on June 22-23.
The existing deal came into force on January 1, 2017, and envisaged global oil producers reducing their combined output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to cut bloated stockpiles and prop up oil prices.
Russia’s oil output reached a 30-year high of 11.247 million bpd in October 2016 and it pledged to cut it by 300,000 bpd to 10.947 mln.
In March and in April this year it failed to fully comply with the deal, pumping at the pace of 10.97 million bpd, a 11-month high.
Oil prices have risen to $80 per barrel, levels unseen since late 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that the price of $60 “suits Russia”.
Novak was also quoted as saying on Saturday he expected Iran to reduce its output by no more than 10 percent as a result of the move by the United States to withdraw from a nuclear deal and reinstate sanctions against Tehran.
“I think the output reduction will not be as significant as many expect,” RIA news agency quoted Novak as saying when asked if he agreed with an estimate that the sanctions could remove as much as 800,000 barrels a day from the market.
“Some 10 percent is probably the maximum level,” he said.
Novak also estimated that the “geopolitical risk” premium to the oil price was around $5-$7 per barrel.
Additional reporting by Oksana Kobzeva; writing by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Helen Popper
The post Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2IM7MwB via News of World
0 notes
newestbalance · 6 years
Text
Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia
MOSCOW (Reuters) – A return to the oil production levels that were in place in October 2016, baseline for the current deal to cut output, is one of the options for easing curbs, Russia’s energy minister said on Saturday.
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak attends a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF), Russia May 25, 2018. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Sources said this week that Saudi Arabia and Russia were discussing raising OPEC and non-OPEC oil production to ease 17 months of strict supply curbs amid concerns that a price rally has gone too far.
“When we extended the agreement until the end of 2018, we spoke about such possibilities (of returning to the October 2016 level),” Novak told reporters.
“But a decision will be made in June,” he added, referring to meetings of OPEC and non-OPEC countries in Vienna on June 22-23.
The existing deal came into force on January 1, 2017, and envisaged global oil producers reducing their combined output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to cut bloated stockpiles and prop up oil prices.
Russia’s oil output reached a 30-year high of 11.247 million bpd in October 2016 and it pledged to cut it by 300,000 bpd to 10.947 mln.
In March and in April this year it failed to fully comply with the deal, pumping at the pace of 10.97 million bpd, a 11-month high.
Oil prices have risen to $80 per barrel, levels unseen since late 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that the price of $60 “suits Russia”.
Novak was also quoted as saying on Saturday he expected Iran to reduce its output by no more than 10 percent as a result of the move by the United States to withdraw from a nuclear deal and reinstate sanctions against Tehran.
“I think the output reduction will not be as significant as many expect,” RIA news agency quoted Novak as saying when asked if he agreed with an estimate that the sanctions could remove as much as 800,000 barrels a day from the market.
“Some 10 percent is probably the maximum level,” he said.
Novak also estimated that the “geopolitical risk” premium to the oil price was around $5-$7 per barrel.
Additional reporting by Oksana Kobzeva; writing by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Helen Popper
The post Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2IM7MwB via Everyday News
0 notes
dani-qrt · 6 years
Text
Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia
MOSCOW (Reuters) – A return to the oil production levels that were in place in October 2016, baseline for the current deal to cut output, is one of the options for easing curbs, Russia’s energy minister said on Saturday.
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak attends a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF), Russia May 25, 2018. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Sources said this week that Saudi Arabia and Russia were discussing raising OPEC and non-OPEC oil production to ease 17 months of strict supply curbs amid concerns that a price rally has gone too far.
“When we extended the agreement until the end of 2018, we spoke about such possibilities (of returning to the October 2016 level),” Novak told reporters.
“But a decision will be made in June,” he added, referring to meetings of OPEC and non-OPEC countries in Vienna on June 22-23.
The existing deal came into force on January 1, 2017, and envisaged global oil producers reducing their combined output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to cut bloated stockpiles and prop up oil prices.
Russia’s oil output reached a 30-year high of 11.247 million bpd in October 2016 and it pledged to cut it by 300,000 bpd to 10.947 mln.
In March and in April this year it failed to fully comply with the deal, pumping at the pace of 10.97 million bpd, a 11-month high.
Oil prices have risen to $80 per barrel, levels unseen since late 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that the price of $60 “suits Russia”.
Novak was also quoted as saying on Saturday he expected Iran to reduce its output by no more than 10 percent as a result of the move by the United States to withdraw from a nuclear deal and reinstate sanctions against Tehran.
“I think the output reduction will not be as significant as many expect,” RIA news agency quoted Novak as saying when asked if he agreed with an estimate that the sanctions could remove as much as 800,000 barrels a day from the market.
“Some 10 percent is probably the maximum level,” he said.
Novak also estimated that the “geopolitical risk” premium to the oil price was around $5-$7 per barrel.
Additional reporting by Oksana Kobzeva; writing by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Helen Popper
The post Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2IM7MwB via Online News
0 notes
dragnews · 6 years
Text
Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia
MOSCOW (Reuters) – A return to the oil production levels that were in place in October 2016, baseline for the current deal to cut output, is one of the options for easing curbs, Russia’s energy minister said on Saturday.
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak attends a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF), Russia May 25, 2018. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Sources said this week that Saudi Arabia and Russia were discussing raising OPEC and non-OPEC oil production to ease 17 months of strict supply curbs amid concerns that a price rally has gone too far.
“When we extended the agreement until the end of 2018, we spoke about such possibilities (of returning to the October 2016 level),” Novak told reporters.
“But a decision will be made in June,” he added, referring to meetings of OPEC and non-OPEC countries in Vienna on June 22-23.
The existing deal came into force on January 1, 2017, and envisaged global oil producers reducing their combined output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to cut bloated stockpiles and prop up oil prices.
Russia’s oil output reached a 30-year high of 11.247 million bpd in October 2016 and it pledged to cut it by 300,000 bpd to 10.947 mln.
In March and in April this year it failed to fully comply with the deal, pumping at the pace of 10.97 million bpd, a 11-month high.
Oil prices have risen to $80 per barrel, levels unseen since late 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that the price of $60 “suits Russia”.
Novak was also quoted as saying on Saturday he expected Iran to reduce its output by no more than 10 percent as a result of the move by the United States to withdraw from a nuclear deal and reinstate sanctions against Tehran.
“I think the output reduction will not be as significant as many expect,” RIA news agency quoted Novak as saying when asked if he agreed with an estimate that the sanctions could remove as much as 800,000 barrels a day from the market.
“Some 10 percent is probably the maximum level,” he said.
Novak also estimated that the “geopolitical risk” premium to the oil price was around $5-$7 per barrel.
Additional reporting by Oksana Kobzeva; writing by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Helen Popper
The post Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2IM7MwB via Today News
0 notes
party-hard-or-die · 6 years
Text
Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia
MOSCOW (Reuters) – A return to the oil production levels that were in place in October 2016, baseline for the current deal to cut output, is one of the options for easing curbs, Russia’s energy minister said on Saturday.
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak attends a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF), Russia May 25, 2018. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Sources said this week that Saudi Arabia and Russia were discussing raising OPEC and non-OPEC oil production to ease 17 months of strict supply curbs amid concerns that a price rally has gone too far.
“When we extended the agreement until the end of 2018, we spoke about such possibilities (of returning to the October 2016 level),” Novak told reporters.
“But a decision will be made in June,” he added, referring to meetings of OPEC and non-OPEC countries in Vienna on June 22-23.
The existing deal came into force on January 1, 2017, and envisaged global oil producers reducing their combined output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to cut bloated stockpiles and prop up oil prices.
Russia’s oil output reached a 30-year high of 11.247 million bpd in October 2016 and it pledged to cut it by 300,000 bpd to 10.947 mln.
In March and in April this year it failed to fully comply with the deal, pumping at the pace of 10.97 million bpd, a 11-month high.
Oil prices have risen to $80 per barrel, levels unseen since late 2014. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that the price of $60 “suits Russia”.
Novak was also quoted as saying on Saturday he expected Iran to reduce its output by no more than 10 percent as a result of the move by the United States to withdraw from a nuclear deal and reinstate sanctions against Tehran.
“I think the output reduction will not be as significant as many expect,” RIA news agency quoted Novak as saying when asked if he agreed with an estimate that the sanctions could remove as much as 800,000 barrels a day from the market.
“Some 10 percent is probably the maximum level,” he said.
Novak also estimated that the “geopolitical risk” premium to the oil price was around $5-$7 per barrel.
Additional reporting by Oksana Kobzeva; writing by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Helen Popper
The post Oil output could return to October 2016 level, says Russia appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2IM7MwB via Breaking News
0 notes
junker-town · 7 years
Text
ESPY Awards 2017: Time, TV channel, and awards and nominees for Wednesday night’s ceremony
Who will win some of sports biggest honors?
The 2017 ESPY Awards will honor some of the best athletes in the world, as well as athletes and fans who have had an impact of the world and our lives.
This is the 25th year of the awards show and, as always, it boasts some of the biggest names in sports and culture. The show will be hosted by former MVP quarterback Peyton Manning, and will feature presenters like Bryan Cranston, Eddie George and Danica Patrick.
How to watch the 2017 ESPY Awards:
Time: Wednesday, July 12, 2017 at 8 p.m. ET
TV: ABC
Online: Watch ESPN
Awards and Nominees:
BEST MALE ATHLETE
Kris Bryant, MLB
Sidney Crosby, NHL
Michael Phelps, Swimming
Russell Westbrook, NBA
BEST FEMALE ATHLETE
Simone Biles, Gymnastics
Katie Ledecky, Swimming
Candace Parker, WNBA
Serena Williams, Tennis
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP PERFORMANCE
Tom Brady, Super Bowl
Kevin Durant, NBA Finals
Shay Knighten, WCWS
DeShaun Watson, CFB National Championship
BEST BREAKTHROUGH ATHLETE
Giannis Antetokounmpo, NBA
Laurie Hernandez, Gymnastics
Aaron Judge, MLB
Dak Prescott, NFL
Christian Pulisic, Soccer
BEST RECORD-BREAKING PERFORMANCE
Bill Belichick: Most Super Bowl wins by a head coach
Michael Phelps: Extended his own record of most gold medals/most Olympic medals
Diana Taurasi: Broke WNBA career scoring record
Russell Westbrook: Most triple doubles in a season
BEST UPSET
Clemson defeats Alabama, CFB National Championship
Denis Istomin over Novak Djokovic, Australian Open 2nd Round
Mississippi State defeats Connecticut, Women’s NCAA Basketball Final Four
BEST GAME
Cubs vs. Indians, World Series Game 7
Patriots vs. Falcons, Super Bowl
Federer vs. Nadal, Australian Open Final
BEST COMEBACK ATHLETE
Matt Bush, MLB
Roger Federer, Tennis
Jordy Nelson, NFL
Candace Parker, WNBA
BEST PLAY (16 NOMINEES VOTED BRACKET-STYLE)
Julian Edelman Super Bowl catch vs. 16. Noah Brown TD catch around defender
Morgan Williams buzzer beater vs. UConn vs.15. Larry Nance dunk
Aaron Rodgers to Jared Cook vs. 14. Lamar Jackson hurdles defender
Northwestern buzzer beater vs. 13. Edwin Encarnacion walk off HR
Russell Westbrook buzzer beater vs. 12. LeBron James dunk off the backboard
Chris Coghlan leaps over catcher vs. 11. Sidney Crosby one-handed goal
Olivier Giroud scorpion kick goa l vs. 10. Warriors jump ball transition dunk
Mario Mandzukic goal in UEFA Final vs. 9. Jarrod Dyson catch
BEST TEAM
Chicago Cubs, MLB
Clemson Tigers, CFB
Golden State Warriors, NBA
Pittsburgh Penguins, NHL
New England Patriots, NFL
South Carolina Gamecocks, Women’s NCAA Basketball
US Women’s Gymnastics
BEST INTERNATIONAL ATHLETE
Canelo Alvarez, Boxing
Usain Bolt, Track & Field
Katinka Hosszu, Swimming
Conor McGregor, MMA
Cristiano Ronaldo, Soccer
BEST NFL PLAYER
Tom Brady, New England Patriots
Ezekiel Elliott, Dallas Cowboys
Khalil Mack, Oakland Raiders
Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Packers
Matt Ryan, Atlanta Falcons
BEST MLB PLAYER
Kris Bryant, Chicago Cubs
David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox
Rick Porcello, Boston Red Sox
Max Scherzer, Washington Nationals
Mike Trout, LA Angels
BEST NHL PLAYER
Sergei Bobrovsky, Columbus Blue Jackets
Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins
Patrick Kane, Chicago Blackhawks
Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs
Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers
BEST DRIVER
Ron Capps, NHRA
Lewis Hamilton, Formula One
Jimmie Johnson, NASCAR
Simon Pagenaud, IndyCar
Martin Truex Jr., NASCAR
BEST NBA PLAYER
Kevin Durant, Golden State Warriors
James Harden, Houston Rockets
LeBron James, Cleveland Cavaliers
Kawhi Leonard, San Antonio Spurs
Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City Thunder
BEST WNBA PLAYER
Tina Charles, New York Liberty
Elena Delle Donne, Washington Mystics
Maya Moore, Minnesota Lynx
Nneka Ogwumike, Los Angeles Sparks
Candace Parker, Los Angeles Sparks
BEST FIGHTER
Terence Crawford, Boxing
Gennady Golovkin, Boxing
Demetrious Johnson, MMA
Conor McGregor, MMA
Andre Ward, Boxing
BEST MALE GOLFER
Brooks Koepka
Sergio Garcia
Dustin Johnson
Rory McIlroy
Henrik Stenson
BEST FEMALE GOLFER
In Gee Chun
Ariya Jutanugarn
Lydia Ko
So Yeon Ryu
Lexi Thompson
BEST MALE TENNIS PLAYER
Roger Federer
Andy Murray
Rafael Nadal
Stan Wawrinka
BEST FEMALE TENNIS PLAYER
Angelique Kerber
Jelena Ostapenko
Monica Puig
Serena Williams
BEST MALE COLLEGE ATHLETE
Ian Harkes, Wake Forest soccer
Frank Mason, Kansas basketball
Matt Rambo, Maryland lacrosse
Zain Retherford, Penn State wrestling
DeShaun Watson, Clemson football
BEST FEMALE COLLEGE ATHLETE
Inky Ajanaku, Stanford volleyball
Kelly Barnhill, Florida softball
Kadeisha Buchanan, West Virginia soccer
Kelsey Plum, Washington basketball
Zoe Stukenberg, Maryland lacrosse
BEST MALE ACTION SPORTS ATHLETE
Oystein Braaten (NOR), Ski
John John Florence, Surf
Nyjah Huston, Skateboard
Mark McMorris, Snowboard
BEST FEMALE ACTION SPORTS ATHLETE
Lacey Baker, Skateboard
Anna Gasser, Snowboard
Kelly Sildaru, Ski
Tyler Wright, Surf
BEST JOCKEY
Javier Castellano
Mike E. Smith
John Velasquez
BEST MALE ATHLETE WITH A DISABILITY
Will Groulx, Cycling
Mike Minor, Snowboarding
Steve Serio, Wheelchair Basketball
Brad Snyder, Swimming
Roderick Townsend, Track and Field
BEST FEMALE ATHLETE WITH A DISABILITY
Oksana Masters, Nordic Skiing
Tatyana McFadden, Track and Field
Becca Meyers, Swimming
Shawn Morelli, Cycling
Grace Norman, Triathlon
BEST BOWLER
Jason Belmonte
Francois Lavoie
EJ Tackett
BEST MLS PLAYER
Andre Blake, Philadelphia Union
Stefan Frei, Seattle Sounders FC
Matt Hedges, FC Dallas
David Villa, New York City FC
Bradley Wright-Phillips, New York Red Bulls
BEST MALE US OLYMPIC ATHLETE
Ashton Eaton, Decathlon
Ryan Murphy, Swimming
Michael Phelps, Swimming
Kyle Snyder, Wrestling
BEST FEMALE US OLYMPIC ATHLETE
Simone Biles, Gymnastics
Allyson Felix, Track & Field
Katie Ledecky, Swimming
Simone Manuel, Swimming
As always, the ESPYs look to be an exciting night of honoring the great achievements in sports. Check back here for updates on winners as the night goes on.
0 notes
energysolutions · 7 years
Text
Gazprom’s annual General Shareholders Meeting elects new Board of Directors has been published on Energy Solutions News
New Post has been published on http://www.energybrokers.co.uk/news/gazprom/gazproms-annual-general-shareholders-meeting-elects-new-board-of-directors-2
Gazprom’s annual General Shareholders Meeting elects new Board of Directors
June 30, 2017
Based on the voting results, the annual General Shareholders Meeting of Gazprom formed the Company's Board of Directors composed as follows:
 1. 
Akimov, Andrey Igorevich
Chairman of the Management Board, Gazprombank (Joint Stock Company)
 2. 
Kulibaev, Timur Askarovich
Chairman of the Legal Entities Association “Kazakhstan Association of Oil, Gas and Energy Sector Organizations (KAZENERGY),” Chairman of the Presidium of the National Chamber of Entrepreneurs, Republic of Kazakhstan (Atameken)
 3. 
Manturov, Denis Valentinovich
Minister of Industry and Trade of the Russian Federation
 4. 
Markelov, Vitaly Anatolyevich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Committee, Gazprom
 5. 
Martynov, Viktor Georgievich
Rector of the Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas (National Research University)
 6. 
Mau, Vladimir Alexandrovich
Rector of the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration
 7. 
Miller, Alexey Borisovich
Chairman of the Management Committee, Gazprom
 8. 
Novak, Alexander Valentinovich
Minister of Energy of the Russian Federation
 9. 
Patrushev, Dmitry Nikolaevich
Chairman of the Management Board, Rosselkhozbank
10. 
Sereda, Mikhail Leonidovich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Committee – Head of the Administration of the Management Committee, Gazprom
11. 
Zubkov, Viktor Alexeevich
Russia's Special Presidential Representative for Cooperation with the Gas Exporting Countries Forum
  The Meeting also elected a new 9-member Audit Commission consisting of:
Bikulov, Vadim Kasymovich;
Fisenko, Tatyana Vladimirovna;
Gladkov, Alexander Alexeevich;
Mironova, Margarita Ivanovna;
Nosov, Yury Stanislavovich;
Oganyan, Karen Iosifovich;
Petrova, Alexandra Andreevna;
Platonov, Sergey Revazovich;
Tarasenko, Oksana Valeryevna.
0 notes
ESPY Awards 2017 Nominations: Tom Brady, Serena Williams, Michael Phelps and More!
Tom Brady, Serena Williams, Simone Biles and LeBron James are among the top athletes nominated for a 2017 ESPY Award.
RELATED: Michael Phelps to Race Against a Great White Shark In Shark Week's 'Phelps vs. Shark'
The complete list of nominees for the sports award show was revealed on Wednesday, and fans can now vote online for their favorite athletes.
Hosted by former NFL quarterback Peyton Manning, the 25th ESPY Awards will take place on July 12 at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, California. The ceremony will air live on ABC.
RELATED: Serena Williams Cradles Her Baby Bump in New Pics From French Getaway
See the complete list of nominees below:
Best Male Athlete Kris Bryant, MLB Sidney Crosby, NHL Michael Phelps, Swimming Russell Westbrook, NBA
Best Female Athlete Simone Biles, Gymnastics Katie Ledecky, Swimming Candace Parker, WNBA Serena Williams, Tennis
Best Championship Performance Tom Brady, Super Bowl Kevin Durant, NBA Finals Shay Knighten, WCWS Deshaun Watson, CFB National Championship
Best Breakthrough Athlete Giannis Antetokounmpo, NBA Laurie Hernandez, Gymnastics Aaron Judge, MLB Dak Prescott, NFL Christian Pulisic, Soccer
Best Record-Breaking Performance Bill Belichick most Super Bowl wins by a head coach Michael Phelps extends his own record of most gold medals/most Olympic medals Diana Taurasi breaks WNBA career scoring record Russell Westbrook most triple doubles in a season
Best Upset Clemson defeats Alabama, CFB National Championship Denis Istomin over Novak Djokovic, Australian Open 2nd Round Mississippi State defeats Connecticut, Women's NCAA Basketball Final Four
Best Game Cubs vs. Indians, World Series Game 7 Patriots vs. Falcons, Super Bowl Federer vs. Nadal, Australian Open Final
Best Comeback Athlete Matt Bush, MLB Roger Federer, Tennis Jordy Nelson, NFL Candace Parker, WNBA
Best Play Julian Edelman Super Bowl catch vs. 16. Noah Brown TD catch around defender Morgan Williams buzzer beater vs. UConn vs.15. Larry Nance dunk Aaron Rodgers to Jared Cook vs. 14. Lamar Jackson hurdles defender Northwestern buzzer beater vs. 13. Edwin Encarnacion walk off HR Russell Westbrook buzzer beater vs. 12. LeBron James dunk off the backboard Chris Coghlan leaps over catcher vs. 11. Sidney Crosby one-handed goal Olivier Giroud scorpion kick goa l vs. 10. Warriors jump ball transition dunk Mario Mandzukic goal in UEFA Final vs. 9. Jarrod Dyson catch
Best Team Chicago Cubs, MLB Clemson Tigers, CFB Golden State Warriors, NBA Pittsburgh Penguins, NHL New England Patriots, NFL South Carolina Gamecocks, Women's NCAA Basketball US Women's Gymnastics
Best International Athlete Canelo Alvarez, Boxing Usain Bolt, Track & Field Katinka Hosszu, Swimming Conor McGregor, MMA Cristiano Ronaldo, Soccer
Best NFL Player Tom Brady, New England Patriots Ezekiel Elliott, Dallas Cowboys Khalil Mack, Oakland Raiders Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Packers Matt Ryan, Atlanta Falcons
Best MLB Player Kris Bryant, Chicago Cubs David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox Rick Porcello, Boston Red Sox Max Scherzer, Washington Nationals Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels
Best NHL Player Sergei Bobrovsky, Columbus Blue Jackets Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins Patrick Kane, Chicago Blackhawks Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers
Best Driver Ron Capps, NHRA Lewis Hamilton, Formula One Jimmie Johnson, NASCAR Simon Pagenaud, IndyCar Martin Truex Jr., NASCAR
Best NBA Player Kevin Durant, Golden State Warriors James Harden, Houston Rockets LeBron James, Cleveland Cavaliers Kawhi Leonard, San Antonio Spurs Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City Thunder
Best WNBA Player Tina Charles, New York Liberty Elena Delle Donne, Washington Mystics Maya Moore, Minnesota Lynx Nneka Ogwumike, Los Angeles Sparks Candace Parker, Los Angeles Sparks
Best Fighter Terence Crawford, Boxing Gennady Golovkin, Boxing Demetrious Johnson, MMA Conor McGregor, MMA Andre Ward, Boxing
Best Male Golfer Brooks Koepka Sergio Garcia Dustin Johnson Rory McIlroy Henrik Stenson
Best Female Golfer In Gee Chun Ariya Jutanugarn Lydia Ko So Yeon Ryu Lexi Thompson
Best Male Tennis Player Roger Federer Andy Murray Rafael Nadal Stan Wawrinka
Best Female Tennis Player Angelique Kerber Jelena Ostapenko Monica Puig Serena Williams
Best Male College Athlete Ian Harkes, Wake Forest soccer Frank Mason, Kansas basketball Matt Rambo, Maryland lacrosse Zain Retherford, Penn State wrestling DeShaun Watson, Clemson football
Best Female College Athlete Inky Ajanaku, Stanford volleyball Kelly Barnhill, Florida softball Kadeisha Buchanan, West Virginia soccer Kelsey Plum, Washington basketball Zoe Stukenberg, Maryland lacrosse
Best Male Action Sports Athlete Oystein Braaten (NOR), Ski John John Florence, Surf Nyjah Huston, Skateboard Mark McMorris, Snowboard
Best Female Action Sports Athlete Lacey Baker, Skateboard Anna Gasser, Snowboard Kelly Sildaru, Ski Tyler Wright, Surf
Best Jockey Javier Castellano Mike E. Smith John Velasquez
Best Male Athlete With a Disability Will Groulx, Cycling Mike Minor, Snowboarding Steve Serio, Wheelchair Basketball Brad Snyder, Swimming Roderick Townsend, Track and Field
Best Female Athlete With a Disability Oksana Masters, Nordic Skiing Tatyana McFadden, Track and Field Becca Meyers, Swimming Shawn Morelli, Cycling Grace Norman, Triathlon
Best Bowler Jason Belmonte Francois Lavoie EJ Tackett
Best MLS Player Andre Blake, Philadelphia Union Stefan Frei, Seattle Sounders FC Matt Hedges, FC Dallas David Villa, New York City FC Bradley Wright-Phillips, New York Red Bulls
Best Male US Olympic Athlete Ashton Eaton, Decathlon Ryan Murphy, Swimming Michael Phelps, Swimming Kyle Snyder, Wrestling
Best Female US Olympic Athlete Simone Biles, Gymnastics Allyson Felix, Track & Field Katie Ledecky, Swimming Simone Manuel, Swimming
brightcove
0 notes