Christopher A. Smith was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on Dec. 16, 2014, as the Department of Energy’s assistant secretary for fossil energy, according to a news release.
Smith will be responsible for the Office of Fossil Energy’s Research and Development program, encompassing coal, oil and natural gas, along with the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Prior to his Senate confirmation, Smith served as principal deputy assistant secretary for oil and natural gas, the release said. During that tenure he also served as the designated federal official for the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling that was established by President Barack Obama to investigate the root causes of the gulf oil spill.
Prior to joining the Department, Smith served in managerial and analytical positions in the private sector. He spent 11 years with two major international oil companies focused primarily on upstream business development and LNG trading, including three years negotiating production and transportation agreements in Bogotá, Columbia, the release continued.
Smith began his career as an officer in the U. S. Army, with tours in Korea and Hawaii. He subsequently worked for Citibank and JPMorgan in New York City and London in the area of emerging markets and currency derivatives. Smith holds a Bachelor’s of Science in engineering management from the United States Military Academy at West Point and a Master’s of Business Administration from Cambridge University, according to the release.
Recommended Reading
CERAWeek: Energy Secretary Defends LNG Pause Amid Industry Outcry
2024-03-18 - U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said she expects the review of LNG exports to be in the “rearview mirror” by next year.
From Satellites to Regulators, Everyone is Snooping on Oil, Gas
2024-04-10 - From methane taxes to an environmental group’s satellite trained on oil and gas emissions, producers face intense scrutiny, even if the watchers aren’t necessarily interested in solving the problem.
Utah’s Ute Tribe Demands FTC Allow XCL-Altamont Deal
2024-04-24 - More than 90% of the Utah Ute tribe’s income is from energy development on its 4.5-million-acre reservation and the tribe says XCL Resources’ bid to buy Altamont Energy shouldn’t be blocked.