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US Energy Secretary promises faster industry development

Chris Wright, the new U.S. Energy Secretary, said in one of his meetings with oil and natural gas executives that he wanted to support and speed up the permitting process.

His remarks, made during a dinner in Houston ahead of the largest gathering in the energy industry in the world, matched President Donald Trump's efforts to maximize U.S. production of oil and gas.

Bob Dudley told him as he left the dinner that "they're in a rush".

They don't want to see things slowed down by endless years of permits. The United States is known for being a slow country.

Wright, Dudley's predecessor, is now the chair of the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative. This industry-led group aims to speed up the response to climate changes. He added that he expected Wright to place an emphasis on nuclear developments and quicker permitting.

Leaders from the energy sector are meeting in the face of a plummeting price for oil, which could undermine the Obama administration's policy to "drill baby drill". The top U.S. oil companies have announced thousands of layoffs this year.

The U.S. production of oil and gas was already record-breaking before Trump became president, and the prices are nearing their lowest levels in three years. There is no incentive to pump any more. In recent years, it has become a custom for executives in the U.S. oil and gas industry to gather for a private meal as the conference begins.

The U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum was present, along with CEOs of Baker Hughes, Occidental Petroleum and TotalEnergies. Williams Companies, Petrobras, EQT Corp, Gunvor Group Ltd, and Williams Companies.

In the past, these dinners included a representative from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

Wright, a former executive of a hydraulic fracturing firm in Denver, Colorado, declined to make any comments as he left the dinner. He will speak at the conference on Monday.

Dan Brouillette was the U.S. Energy Secretary during Trump's initial term.

The attendees said that the tariffs which caused oil markets to be roiled as Trump implemented and then paused levies against Canada and Mexico were not discussed.

Trump's protectionist policies have caused markets to tremble due to concerns that they will affect economic growth and lower the demand for oil. (Reporting and writing by Arathy S. Somasekhar in Houston, Liz Hampton in New York; editing by Jamie Freed.)

(source: Reuters)