Chris Wright by Al Drago/Bloomberg
Energy Secretary Chris Wright sought to reassure U.S. oil companies during a visit to Oklahoma, saying turmoil from President Donald Trump’s trade war is apt to be fleeting and the administration fully supports more crude output.
“The uncertainty you are seeing around tariffs — that’s a short-term issue,” Wright said during an interview with Bloomberg Television at an energy conference in Oklahoma City. He later added: “We’re doing everything we can to encourage production.”
Wright, who previously ran one of the world’s biggest fracking service providers, said the uncertainty roiling the broader market is because the U.S. in the midst of negotiating more favorable trade deals. He predicted it would only last “a few more weeks.”
When it comes to oil production, Wright said the Trump administration is focused on tearing down barriers to make it cheaper and easier to pump crude and natural gas.
At @okstate Hamm Institute with @SecretaryWright & @epaleezeldin, driving @POTUS‘ vision of American energy dominance! @USDA, @ENERGY & @EPA are united to fast-track energy development & empower rural America’s role in energy dominance! 🇺🇸 ⚡ pic.twitter.com/5BkG9LKhsy
— Secretary Brooke Rollins (@SecRollins) April 24, 2025
Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum appeared at the event hosted by shale billionaire Harold Hamm as oil prices have plunged more than 10% this month in the wake of Trump’s trade war and a decision by OPEC to beef up a production increase scheduled for later this year. For 14 consecutive days, West Texas Intermediate futures have settled below $65 a barrel — the price many companies need to break even on new wells.
Those lower prices coupled with the trade war have caused significant unease across the industry, threatening to undercut the president’s own goal to ramp up fossil fuel production.
Two of the largest oilfield service providers, Halliburton Co. and Baker Hughes Co., warned this week that tariffs were impacting their bottom line. Matador Resources Co., a Texas shale company, announced April 23 it was dropping one of its nine drilling rigs. And last month, a host of oil bosses delivered scathing critiques of Trump’s policies in an anonymous survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Nonetheless, the executives at the event in Oklahoma City, focused on powering AI development, were largely upbeat.
“We feel good about where we’re at,” Clay Gaspar, CEO of Devon Energy Corp. said in a Bloomberg TV interview.
Harold Hamm, a shale billionaire and significant donor to President Donald Trump, said his company Continental Resources is committing to only buy oilfield equipment made in the US — even if it costs more. https://t.co/fxpzNfOqmM
— Bloomberg (@business) April 25, 2025
He added that oil prices have remained close to the $65 average that Devon uses to plan its operations in the midst of a cycle.
Hamm, the co-founder of Continental Resources and one of Trump’s biggest donors from the oil patch, said the president needs leeway to hammer out trade deals.
“I see a lot of positives — we just don’t want to get bogged down negatively,” Hamm said in a Bloomberg TV interview. “We’ve seen so many good things, I think he’ll go down as the president that made a difference.”
Hamm added that removing the uncertainty from tariffs could help oil prices climb back into the mid-$70s.
Burgum, the interior secretary, told executives at the event that he will slash permitting times to 14 days for projects solely under the purview of his department. For projects needing a full environmental impact statement, his goal is 28 days.
“You might say to yourself, ‘How is this possible?’ ” Burgum said, drawing applause. “But we’re going to find out. So, some of you in this room are going to apply for permits, and then we’re going to work to deliver in those time frames.”
One oil chief did level some criticism at the Trump team — albeit with a dash of praise. Occidental Petroleum Corp. CEO Vicki Hollub said for all its passion for energy independence, the administration lacks an overarching plan to pull it all together.
“We don’t have an energy direction right now,” Hollub said. “We have a lot of great ideas. We have a lot of people wanting to do things. But we need a plan.”
Nonetheless, the CEO said in an interview she’s optimistic Trump has put the right people in place to come up with a holistic strategy.
“It’s never been done before,” she said. “I think for the first time — this administration can do it.”