The methanol producer is aiming for increased profitability and distributions after an upcoming plant upgrade. Read More
It's hard to imagine anyone better suited to covering the energy-investment waterfront than Robert Rapier.
Robert is no armchair analyst—he has two decades of in-the-trenches experience in a wide range of fossil fuel and biofuel technologies, including refining, natural gas production, gas-to-liquids, ethanol production and butanol production.
During a six-year stretch at ConocoPhillips, Robert ran a team of engineers in Scotland working on oil and gas projects in the North Sea.
For two years, Robert was an efficiency expert in a Texas petrochemical plant. The process changes he implemented saved the facility $9 million a year. He later worked as the Engineering Director for a Dutch environmental-technology company and provided engineering support for a Chinese facility the company was constructing.
Robert was also a butanol engineer in Germany for the Celanese Corporation, where he designed a novel butanol unit that cut production costs by $5 million per year.
In all, Robert has spent more than a dozen years working on liquid fuels technologies. Along the way he's picked up five patents, including one for a breakthrough way to convert ethane into ethylene (U.S. Patent 7,074,977).
Now, in addition to guiding readers to timely investments in Utility Forecaster and Rapier's Income Accelerator, Robert travels the world evaluating startup energy companies for deep-pocketed investors. After grilling management and assessing the technology on-site, he makes a go/no-go investment decision. His wealthy private investors and hedge fund backers trust him to make the right choice for the same reason we do: his vast real-world experience in just about every facet of the energy industry. If Robert votes thumbs-up, millions of dollars flow into these cutting-edge outfits.
Robert earned his master of science in chemical engineering and a bachelor of science in chemistry and mathematics (double major) at Texas A&M University. He tells us he was "this close" to finishing his Ph.D. before he decided he was having a lot more fun making money in energy stocks.
A prolific writer, Robert's articles have appeared in Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and the Christian Science Monitor -- and he has been a featured expert on 60 Minutes and The History Channel. His new book, Power Plays: Energy Options in the Age of Peak Oil (Apress, 2012), helps investors sort through doom and gloom, hype and misinformation to understand the true costs, benefits and trade-offs for each of our major energy options.
In what little spare time he has left, Robert consults for a number of energy projects, including biodiesel, ethanol, butanol and biomass gasification facilities.
Analyst Articles
A merger of two Gulf drillers was a rare bright spot for energy stocks getting nowhere fast. We look at the past and the future of domestic offshore drilling, survey the action in energy commodities and recommend two MLPs that won’t sink. Read More
Crude production in the Gulf of Mexico is down since the Macondo spill, but the outlook is bright and the deal-making may have only just started. Read More
The weakest energy commodity will benefit from costlier natural gas. Know the MLPs in line to profit. Read More
The weakest energy commodity will benefit from costlier natural gas. Know the MLPs in line to profit. Read More
Plentiful domestic crude has defied numerous predictions of a price collapse thanks to rising global demand, along with unrest in Libya and Venezuela. Read More
Some offshore shipping partnerships have elected to be taxed in the US as corporations while sheltering on Pacific atolls. Read More
This year’s abnormally large withdrawal from storage is setting up an opportunity for investors. Read More
Extreme cold has taxed natural gas reserves, promising higher prices in the months ahead. Several of the gas drillers that will profit are among our market-leading best buys getting higher price targets. Down the line, nuclear fuel could also grow scarce, to the benefit of two new picks among uranium miners. Read More
Dangerously low reserves of natural gas will mean high prices in the months ahead. Now’s the time to stock up on drillers that will benefit. Read More