Listen & Learn

FUEL Key People Discuss Refining Industry Issues More.
Upcoming Issue

• Interview with the Singapore Economic Development Board – what is on the horizon for the energy hub?
• Interview with International Refiner of the Year award winner David Sexton, Vice President, Portfolio, Americas, Shell
• Marine and jet fuels – new developments and global perspectives
• Carbon trading
• International foci – Russia, Europe
Top Stories

Risk Management and Ethanol Trading
• Ethanol or Food?
Fuel from Waste: A Lucrative Business?
• Technological Leaps: Sugar Ethanol
• Fossil Fuels Day
Fuel Quality in Africa
• Spring is for Taxes
Crude Oil: A Wake-up Call   
• The Convergence of Commonality
China, United States: Two Players, One Game
• Q&A with Chevron’s Don Paul
• Challenges, Opportunities in the Middle East
Economics and Politics: The Future of Indonesia 
• China’s Quest for Oil Overseas
• Study: Inhaling Diesel Particulates Stresses Brain
• NPRA Wrapup
Global Challenges: Conservation of Fossil Fuels
• Refining & Energy Companies of the Year
• Top-97 Countries Ranked by Clean, Low-sulfur Gasoline Limit

FUEL magazine partners in media participation with Altermobile Europe 2008
The conference, which will be held Nov. 4-5 in Munich, Germany, will focus on the investment opportunities of the alternative car industry. The conference is expected to bring together about 200 executives, from alternative energy investors and automotive companies to start-up ventures and service providers. For more information, visit www.terrapinn.com/2008/altermobile
Biofuels

To Advertise contact:
Krisitne Klavers, Publisher
kklavers@ifqc.org
1-713-993-00321
Karen Chan
Karen Chan, Asia Pacific and Middle East Sales
kchan@hartenergy.com


By Patricia Hemsworth, VP, Triland USA Inc.
The fuel ethanol industry has evolved from its experimental beginnings in Brazil in the 1970s and the passionate advocacy of U.S. corn growers in to the mainstream to become a key part of the global energy menu. More
By Jim Romeo, Contributing Editor
Trash, waste, cellulosic material and organic by-products have long been brewing as the next big resource for the production of biofuels. As public and private entities see waste as an opportunistic resource, its viability is accelerating. More

By George Unzelman, Guest Columnist
George Unzelman, who has more than 50 years of refining experience and is featured in an interview later in the magazine, has been in the industry during some of its most dramatic changes – some predicted, some results of opposition. In an opinion editorial, Unzelman shares his observations and predictions moving forward. More

What Our Readers Say
I read FUEL from cover to cover.

- Saudi Aramco



By Monique A. Hitchings
The Business of People More


We Want to Know