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Natural gas executives, US authorities clash over energy policies

Energy executives and U.S. federal government officials on Tuesday clashed at an international energy conference over efforts by President Joe Biden's. administration to internationally advance clean fuels and geopolitical. aims.

Top energy executives took to the phase at the GasTech. conference in Houston to blast the U.S., stating it did not have a. clear policy for attaining its objectives or supplying required power. for financial developments such as the rise of synthetic. intelligence.

It would appear we do not have a cohesive, collective. choice on how policy must be rolled out and likewise the. sustainability of that policy for sustainable energy. advancement, stated Lorenzo Simonelli, CEO of Baker Hughes .

AI's advance will depend not only on the design laboratories of. Silicon Valley, however also on the gas fields of the Permian. basin, Chevron CEO Michael Wirth stated at the yearly conference.

ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance likewise said the U.S. has. been slow to authorize required energy export jobs or address. required permitting improvements.

We absolutely need permitting reform, and we require more. infrastructure, he said.

However Brad Crabtree, an assistant secretary for fossil energy. and carbon management at the U.S. Department of Energy, informed the. audience that the administration's Facilities Expense has made. billions of dollars offered for brand-new energy tasks.

The DOE is transferring to speed up task reviews to get. moneying distributed for hydrogen, carbon storage and other clean. energy efforts before the change of administrations in January,. he said.

I'm delighted by the scope and rate of what we're doing to. decrease carbon emissions, said Crabtree. He included he is really. concerned about difficulties to permitting for hydrogen and. carbon storage tasks.

The U.S. is collaborating broadly with other countries and. energy groups to achieve clean-energy objectives and counter competitors,. stated U.S. State Department authorities Geoffrey Pyatt.

A second thrust of U.S. energy policy is to ensure that. Russia pays a cost on the extraordinary violence that it is. causing on residents, indicating efforts to build an. coalition on sanctions.

Peter Clarke, an Exxon senior vice president, said. developing countries need to not be expected to adopt the exact same. clean-energy strategies as advanced economies.

There is not a one-size-fits-all for Asia, Clarke said. We need to be cautious with taking policies in developed. countries, and expecting establishing countries to leap to that..

(source: Reuters)