Skip to main content

Industry News & Trends

  • Williams Lands Barrett

    Valero Energy Corp. and Ultramar Diamond Shamrock Corp. weren't the only two oil companies making merger news today as Williams Cos. Inc. agreed to buy oil and natural gas company Barrett Resources Corp. for approximately $2.5 billion in cash and stock.
  • C-Stores 'Burned' by Wildfires

    In the Tri-Cities area, Aztex has sold four stations to Mountain Empire Oil. The company has a purchase agreement for the sale of its nine Nashville stores and two pieces of vacant property there to Parman Oil Co.
  • U.S. Retailers Learn From Europe Fuel Crisis

    Shell Hydrogen is also participating in a unique collaboration between the state of California, energy companies and automobile manufacturers, called the California Fuel Cell Partnership.
  • C-Stores 'Burned' by Wildfires

    The job cuts, meant to save $75 million a year, are in addition to an early retirement program offered to 970 workers. Those employees have until October to decide if they want to retire.
  • Associations

    The National Association of Convenience Stores (NACS) named John Hervey chief technology officer. In this newly created position, Hervey will lead the associations technology efforts for the convenience store industry including standards, new technologies, e-commerce initiatives, and content for NACS' technology-related educational programming, particularly for the technology-focused nacs.tech conference.
  • C-Stores 'Burned' by Wildfires

    Sunoco has received "viable offers" for the Kendall brand, customer lists and a lubricants-blending plant in Tulsa, Okla., spokesperson Jerry Davis said. The company expects to take an unspecified third-quarter charge to write down the assets' value.
  • U.S. Retailers Learn From Europe Fuel Crisis

    The office of the Kremlin property manager Vladimir Kozhin filed the lawsuit. Attorney Nancy Ashenoff said it follows the lines of other lawsuits filed by her firm for Ecuador, Venezuela and Brazilian states.
  • "Hitting" the Lottery

    The popularity of instant lottery tickets has made scratch-off games easy marks for dishonest employees, according to industry specialists.
X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds