By Amanda Drane
Houston Chronicle , February 9,2023
Nothing was more emblematic of the attitude of the crowd of oilmen toward the energy transition than the presence of Ford’s electric “Lightning” pickup, tucked in a far corner of NAPE’s exhibit hall and getting little love.
A gasoline-powered Ford Bronco, meanwhile, was front and center near the entrance, winning crowds of onlookers putting their names in a raffle for the right to drive it home.
Thousands of small oil operators, landmen and geologists gathered in downtown Houston last week for the conference known as NAPE, the North American Prospect Expo, which marked its 30th anniversary. The annual event is known in the industry for fostering an environment where independent producers can search for oil and gas land and broker business deals.
So it should come as no surprise that despite an international effort to move away from fossil fuels, this crowd is still cooking with gas.
The event featured a keynote from Alex Epstein, a controversial author who argues that the transition away from fossil fuels is immoral. Presentations from bitcoin companies advocating for the use of bitcoin mining to mitigate gas emissions drew crowds of hundreds.
Attendees poked holes in plans for a global energy transition. They reveled in stickers that said “I love fossil fuels.” They clapped when Republican governors from Oklahoma and Wyoming decried government overreach and attacked “dumb” energy policies.
Big oil may be barreling toward a new energy future — spending billions of dollars piloting new energy sources such as hydrogen while continuing to bank record profits on oil — but the smaller, independent companies at this conference are less equipped for a pivot of that magnitude. And they are inclined to think it is ill-conceived, especially now as they gear up for what is likely to be another big year for oil.
Despite a lagging world economy and weakening oil demand, oil supplies remain tight, or President Joe Biden would not have continued to draw down the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Perhaps there is a future in which small producers like the ones that filled the exhibit hall at the George R. Brown Convention Center get redirected into mining resources needed for clean energy, such as lithium or even new sources such as geothermal. But how could they see that far ahead when the world still desperately needs a product that they are uniquely equipped to provide?
Originally posted by The Houston Chronicle