Since Trump took office in January, his administration has started approving LNG terminals and cutting barriers that restricted the use of the fuel.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum are traveling to a Louisiana-based Liquified Natural Gas exporter Thursday, as the company announces a massive $18 billion expansion of its existing facility.
The planned expansion of a massive liquefied natural gas facility in southeast Louisiana is a beacon for U.S. energy policy, according to two members of President Donald Trump's cabinet who spoke to workers there.
Two members of President Donald Trump’s cabinet visited Plaquemines Parish on Thursday (March 6) to tour the largest construction project currently underway in North America and to announce a major expansion of the facility.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum held a joint appearance in south Louisiana Thursday to tout the
The planned expansion of a massive liquefied natural gas facility in southeast Louisiana is a beacon for a U.S. energy policy that doubles down on oil and gas exports under President Donald Trump, two members of his Cabinet told a crowd of cheering workers Thursday.
The AP, which occasionally will perform acts of journalism when they’re not busy dead-naming the Gulf of America, has a story up about two of the Trump administration’s Cabinet secretaries making a trip to Venture Global’s liquified natural gas terminal in Port Sulphur to talk up LNG
Secretary Burgum ended the proceedings by exclaiming the upgrade was helping to “Make America Great Again,” and after he thanked Venture Global and everyone that played a part in helping out, one of Creed’s biggest hits started playing over the loudspeakers:
The company was joined Thursday by Trump administration officials to tout a Louisiana project aimed at boosting gas exports.
The recent change in administration in Washington has sparked a renewed sense of optimism here in Louisiana. This transition presents an opportunity to realign priorities that have, in some cases, pro
Conservation groups fear the Trump administration may seek to redraw the boundaries of national monuments, including two newly created ones in California.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum said he believes President Donald Trump will win the Nobel Peace Prize, suggesting that U.S. energy will be key in achieving world peace.