- Blog

Two Countries, One Market - The Theme for RBN's 2025 School of Energy: You Ain’t Seen Nothin' Yet!

Author Martin King

It's an integrated energy market that stretches across the North American continent, from Texas and Florida to the mountains of British Columbia and Canada’s industrial heartland in Ontario/Quebec — a cross-border network so deeply connected, it functions as one massive, interdependent system for oil, natural gas and NGLs. That system is undergoing major shifts and challenges, driven not only by changing supply/demand dynamics and evolving infrastructure within the market itself, but also by powerful external forces, including regulatory policies and political pressures. That’s why we couldn’t think of a better time — or a better place — to host RBN’s 19th School of Energy than in Calgary next month. In today’s RBN blog — a blatant advertorial — we’ll highlight how our upcoming conference will dig into how the interconnected energy landscape is changing and why understanding those shifts is more critical than ever. You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet! 

- Blog

Lovers in a Dangerous Time, Encore Edition - U.S., Canadian Energy Markets Remain Key Allies Despite Trade Tensions

The North American energy landscape has undergone significant shifts in production, infrastructure and pricing for crude oil, natural gas and NGLs over the past few years and developments within Canada have strengthened its role in the global energy trade, creating opportunities and reshaping supply chains. Yet, the market is constantly changing and today geopolitics and the potential impact of tariffs weigh heavily on the relationship between Canada and the U.S., North America’s two producing heavyweights. That shifting landscape is the subject of today’s RBN blog and a topic we’ll be discussing at our upcoming School of Energy Canada, set for August 26-27 in Calgary. Fair warning, this blog includes an unabashed advertorial for the conference.  

- Blog

Lovers in a Dangerous Time - U.S., Canadian Energy Markets Remain Key Allies Despite Trade Tensions

The North American energy landscape has undergone significant shifts in production, infrastructure and pricing for crude oil, natural gas and NGLs over the past few years and developments within Canada have strengthened its role in the global energy trade, creating opportunities and reshaping supply chains. Yet, the market is constantly changing and today geopolitics and the potential impact of tariffs weigh heavily on the relationship between Canada and the U.S., North America’s two producing heavyweights. That shifting landscape is the subject of today’s RBN blog and a topic we’ll be discussing at our upcoming School of Energy Canada, set for August 26-27 in Calgary. Fair warning, this blog includes an unabashed advertorial for the conference.  

- Blog

Takin Care of Business – Next RBN School of Energy in Calgary

RBN’s School of Energy is headed north – all the way to Calgary.  We have reworked, restructured and reorganized the curriculum to make the conference better than ever.  And we guarantee it will be way cooler than our Houston Schools. We call it a Remix, because we have added new models, replaced some old models and enhanced them all.  But even more important, we have increased the number of model labs from one to FOUR!!  Each lab will step you through the model logic, how to input the data and how to interpret the results.  You will work through cases that will test your knowledge on how the models work.   And of course, all the course content has been updated to reflect the big changes in markets and pricing over the past few months.   Warning, today’s blog is a blatant commercial for our Calgary conference.