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.
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 ...
President Donald Trump said on Thursday the United States would guarantee supplies of liquefied natural gas to Europe, even amid worries that the booming export industry could boost prices of gas for U.
New figures from Europe show fossil fuels are being pushed out of the EU’s electricity system, even as Trump orders a halt to renewable energy projects.
For whatever reason — Scottish golf courses or his deep and abiding love of whales and birds — President Donald Trump has put wind power on his do-not-fund list. And that means Republicans are having to rethink a long-held energy talking point. On the Hill, lawmakers are falling in line, some very succinctly.
Nuclear energy in Europe is essential "for keeping the lights on" while hydrogen's momentum "has already diminished", the executive chairman of Europe's largest utility Iberdrola said at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos on Thursday.