Chris Wright, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to head the U.S. Energy Department, told U.S. senators in his confirmation hearing on Wednesday his first priority is expanding domestic energy production including liquefied natural gas and nuclear power.
Mozambique, TotalEnergies and LNG
Chris Wright, President-elect Donald Trump ‘s pick to head the U.S. Energy Department, will tell U.S. senators in his confirmation hearing on Wednesday his first priority is expanding domestic energy production including liquefied natural gas and nuclear power.
"To compete globally, we must expand energy production, including commercial nuclear and liquefied natural gas, and cut the cost of energy for Americans." The hearing was disrupted several times ...
A risk scenario in Japan's latest draft energy plan through 2040 highlights the importance of LNG in case decarbonization measures take longer than planned.
Still, U.S. exports of LNG, a super-chilled exportable form ... D.C. His coverage ranges from the latest in nuclear power, to environment regulations, to U.S. sanctions and geopolitics.
Wright supports some fossil fuel alternatives, such as small nuclear power reactors ... President Joe Biden paused approvals for LNG exports and put restrictions on drilling on federal lands.
Trump's Energy Department Pick Calls for More LNG and Nuclear Power By Timothy Gardner WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Chris Wright, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to head the U.S. Energy Department ...
Oil futures ended Wednesday at their lowest in almost two weeks, with U.S. benchmark prices notching a fourth straight session decline as investors weighed the potential impact of President Donald Trump's energy policies and tariff threats.
Good afternoon and Happy Wednesday readers! In today’s Daily on Energy, Callie and Maydeen take a look at how President Donald Trump’s flurry of executive orders could affect how lawmakers vote on his two energy nominees.
He withdrew the U.S. from the Paris Climate Accords, putting the growth and success of American communities and families ahead of the extreme and pointless demands of climate radicals. Almost simultaneously,