1 00:00:02,520 --> 00:00:08,239 Speaker 1: Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio news. I don't know if 2 00:00:08,240 --> 00:00:10,080 Speaker 1: you've seen, but it is a tough day in the market. 3 00:00:10,480 --> 00:00:13,360 Speaker 1: Stocks were hit really hard, Oils off two percent, smp 4 00:00:13,560 --> 00:00:17,599 Speaker 1: is off almost three percent. Growth fears and tariffears directly 5 00:00:17,680 --> 00:00:21,279 Speaker 1: impacting the market. What do you say, Oh. 6 00:00:21,079 --> 00:00:22,759 Speaker 2: Look, this president's a businessman. 7 00:00:23,000 --> 00:00:26,279 Speaker 3: He's a negotiator, not his career in politics and his 8 00:00:26,400 --> 00:00:28,680 Speaker 3: career in business. And what has been the end result 9 00:00:28,720 --> 00:00:31,760 Speaker 3: of that improvements for the American people. But we're in 10 00:00:31,760 --> 00:00:33,720 Speaker 3: the midst of a deal right now. We're in midst 11 00:00:33,760 --> 00:00:38,760 Speaker 3: of negotiations. Trump is fighting every day to make conditions, 12 00:00:38,800 --> 00:00:42,600 Speaker 3: business conditions, cost of living conditions better for Americans. I 13 00:00:42,640 --> 00:00:45,159 Speaker 3: think that's the trajectory we're on. But you've always got 14 00:00:45,200 --> 00:00:46,080 Speaker 3: uncertainty on the road. 15 00:00:46,120 --> 00:00:49,240 Speaker 1: There's there's pain for gain, right, but like how long 16 00:00:49,280 --> 00:00:51,680 Speaker 1: that pain lasts for it can be really tricky, particularly 17 00:00:51,680 --> 00:00:53,720 Speaker 1: when we're trying to actually invest. 18 00:00:54,080 --> 00:00:56,720 Speaker 3: Yeah, look, he's got two big goals on trade. 19 00:00:56,920 --> 00:00:58,440 Speaker 2: Number one we've heard about. 20 00:00:58,480 --> 00:01:00,760 Speaker 3: I don't think it's been talked about enough, is Look, 21 00:01:00,800 --> 00:01:04,520 Speaker 3: one hundred thousand or more premature deaths of mostly young 22 00:01:04,560 --> 00:01:09,000 Speaker 3: Americans from fentanyl. He's massively motivated by that. Anyone who's 23 00:01:09,040 --> 00:01:11,759 Speaker 3: been touched by a friend or a family friend that's 24 00:01:11,760 --> 00:01:14,880 Speaker 3: seeing a death from fentanyl, this is just heartbreaking. So 25 00:01:14,959 --> 00:01:16,880 Speaker 3: he's trying to work with both of our neighbor to 26 00:01:16,880 --> 00:01:19,200 Speaker 3: the south and are nable to the north. How can 27 00:01:19,240 --> 00:01:21,559 Speaker 3: we go as far as we can to shut down 28 00:01:21,920 --> 00:01:23,280 Speaker 3: the trafficking in fentanyl? 29 00:01:23,560 --> 00:01:26,760 Speaker 2: I think it's hard to go too far in that direction. 30 00:01:27,160 --> 00:01:29,800 Speaker 3: The other thing President Trump wants to do is have 31 00:01:30,000 --> 00:01:32,600 Speaker 3: free trade, but fair trade. You've heard him talk about 32 00:01:32,640 --> 00:01:35,559 Speaker 3: reciprocal tariffs. You know, we have two hundred and fifty 33 00:01:35,560 --> 00:01:38,840 Speaker 3: percent tariffs to export, you know, dairy products into Canada. 34 00:01:39,000 --> 00:01:41,920 Speaker 3: That doesn't make any sense. That certainly hurts American dairy farmers. 35 00:01:42,240 --> 00:01:45,959 Speaker 3: So let's have the parties come together and together work 36 00:01:46,000 --> 00:01:49,640 Speaker 3: to lower tariff barriers together and have reciprocal trade. 37 00:01:49,720 --> 00:01:50,880 Speaker 2: So it's faritaboth sides. 38 00:01:50,960 --> 00:01:53,760 Speaker 1: All right, let's unpack that for a second. I'm going 39 00:01:53,840 --> 00:01:57,640 Speaker 1: first to the trade barrier part. Just example, when you 40 00:01:57,720 --> 00:02:01,440 Speaker 1: have a tax and a teriff Canadian imports of oil, 41 00:02:02,000 --> 00:02:04,559 Speaker 1: won't that actually hurt consumers because all of a sudden 42 00:02:04,560 --> 00:02:06,720 Speaker 1: you're going to have refiner margins are going to plummet 43 00:02:06,760 --> 00:02:09,600 Speaker 1: and you're gonna have higher gasoline prices. Every analyst on 44 00:02:09,639 --> 00:02:11,640 Speaker 1: the street is saying that they. 45 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:14,760 Speaker 2: Might be wrong, they might be wrong, but they're right. 46 00:02:14,840 --> 00:02:17,360 Speaker 1: I mean, we don't have that oil in the US, right, 47 00:02:17,360 --> 00:02:19,640 Speaker 1: we don't have heavy oil, so we cannotver find it here. 48 00:02:20,639 --> 00:02:23,519 Speaker 3: Yes, it's good for that oil to come into our marketplace, 49 00:02:23,560 --> 00:02:26,760 Speaker 3: and I suspect that market will continue coming into our marketplace. 50 00:02:27,120 --> 00:02:30,360 Speaker 3: So look, there's uncertainty, is unsettling, and that leads to 51 00:02:30,400 --> 00:02:33,079 Speaker 3: a loss of confidence, that leads to fear. But look, 52 00:02:33,120 --> 00:02:36,320 Speaker 3: life is long. This administration has been in fifty days. 53 00:02:36,440 --> 00:02:39,960 Speaker 3: We've had four actions on LNG exports. We're getting rid 54 00:02:40,000 --> 00:02:45,000 Speaker 3: of nonsense regulations on home appliances to make them lower 55 00:02:45,040 --> 00:02:48,440 Speaker 3: costs and higher performing. There's so much positive going on. 56 00:02:48,919 --> 00:02:51,800 Speaker 3: But yes, you're seeing the sausage making up close and personal. 57 00:02:51,919 --> 00:02:53,680 Speaker 2: Okay, at the end of the day, we want a. 58 00:02:53,720 --> 00:02:57,040 Speaker 3: Lower cost for Americans and expand opportunity for Americans, and 59 00:02:57,080 --> 00:02:58,280 Speaker 3: I think that's what you'll see coming. 60 00:02:58,400 --> 00:03:01,080 Speaker 1: But what if the sausage becomes higher gasoline prices or 61 00:03:01,120 --> 00:03:03,160 Speaker 1: diesel prices because of the tariffs. 62 00:03:03,400 --> 00:03:06,720 Speaker 3: Well, since President Trump was elected and since he was inaugurated, 63 00:03:06,760 --> 00:03:09,519 Speaker 3: you've seen the decline in oil prices, and i've decline 64 00:03:09,560 --> 00:03:10,840 Speaker 3: in gasoline prices. 65 00:03:11,080 --> 00:03:12,760 Speaker 2: You saw decline further today. 66 00:03:13,320 --> 00:03:15,600 Speaker 1: This is true if they're down about seventeen percent oil 67 00:03:15,639 --> 00:03:17,960 Speaker 1: prices since the peak back in January. But on the 68 00:03:17,960 --> 00:03:20,600 Speaker 1: flip side, if I'm a driller, how do I drill more? 69 00:03:20,960 --> 00:03:23,280 Speaker 1: Because I don't want to drill when oils at sixty nine. 70 00:03:23,720 --> 00:03:26,959 Speaker 3: So President Trump's worked hard to lower the cost of 71 00:03:27,040 --> 00:03:29,720 Speaker 3: doing business in the United States. We had four years 72 00:03:29,720 --> 00:03:32,800 Speaker 3: in the Biden administration where there was so many barriers 73 00:03:32,840 --> 00:03:34,800 Speaker 3: and you never knew where the next one was coming. 74 00:03:34,840 --> 00:03:37,240 Speaker 3: You can't get a permit on federal land, you can't 75 00:03:37,240 --> 00:03:39,320 Speaker 3: build a gathering line, you can't maybe you're not going 76 00:03:39,360 --> 00:03:41,000 Speaker 3: to be able to export your natural gas. I don't 77 00:03:41,000 --> 00:03:42,600 Speaker 3: want to drill if I'm not sure where it's going 78 00:03:42,680 --> 00:03:46,360 Speaker 3: to go. We had all those things that artificially chilled investment, 79 00:03:46,560 --> 00:03:49,160 Speaker 3: which means to break and break even, prices for the 80 00:03:49,200 --> 00:03:53,200 Speaker 3: companies goes higher and higher. Trump's longer term agenda is 81 00:03:53,240 --> 00:03:56,280 Speaker 3: make it easier to invest in America, lower cost to 82 00:03:56,320 --> 00:04:00,360 Speaker 3: produce oil and natural gas, electricity, manufactured products, everything in 83 00:04:00,400 --> 00:04:02,440 Speaker 3: the United States. So I think you're going to see 84 00:04:02,440 --> 00:04:05,120 Speaker 3: a lowering of the break even, a lowering in the 85 00:04:05,240 --> 00:04:08,000 Speaker 3: threshold at which it no longer makes sense to drill 86 00:04:08,160 --> 00:04:10,200 Speaker 3: but supply to mantel dictate prices for sure. 87 00:04:10,320 --> 00:04:12,520 Speaker 1: Sure, But on the flip side, if you have tariffs 88 00:04:12,560 --> 00:04:14,680 Speaker 1: coming in on aluminum steel, that will raise the break 89 00:04:14,760 --> 00:04:18,080 Speaker 1: even prices for well drilled We need. 90 00:04:18,279 --> 00:04:19,320 Speaker 2: Two motivations there. 91 00:04:19,400 --> 00:04:23,160 Speaker 3: Number One, we've seen so much exporting of manufacturing jobs 92 00:04:23,160 --> 00:04:25,159 Speaker 3: in the United States over the last twenty five years, 93 00:04:25,160 --> 00:04:28,479 Speaker 3: mostly to Asia, driven in large park by China. So 94 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:30,760 Speaker 3: he has a goal, I think, a great goal to 95 00:04:30,920 --> 00:04:34,359 Speaker 3: reshore manufacturing in the United States. We can make heavy 96 00:04:34,400 --> 00:04:38,120 Speaker 3: industry again in this country. But there's a transition time 97 00:04:38,160 --> 00:04:41,919 Speaker 3: there for sure. But look, he's a negotiator, he's a businessman. 98 00:04:42,320 --> 00:04:45,480 Speaker 3: He got elected to lower prices for American consumers. Do 99 00:04:45,480 --> 00:04:47,160 Speaker 3: you think he's going to change his mind and say no, 100 00:04:47,160 --> 00:04:50,760 Speaker 3: I'm in favor of higher prices on American consumers. That's 101 00:04:50,800 --> 00:04:52,240 Speaker 3: not where this administration is going. 102 00:04:52,800 --> 00:04:54,960 Speaker 1: Is just how long the pain will last? I think 103 00:04:55,040 --> 00:04:56,520 Speaker 1: is really at the heart of the question. And as 104 00:04:56,560 --> 00:04:58,800 Speaker 1: a CEO, I have not yet to meet a CEO 105 00:04:58,880 --> 00:05:00,400 Speaker 1: here today that tells me they're going to a drill 106 00:05:00,480 --> 00:05:02,800 Speaker 1: more because they're worried about the uncertainty. 107 00:05:03,440 --> 00:05:05,719 Speaker 2: Uncertainty's unsettling. Uncertainty's unsalling. 108 00:05:05,760 --> 00:05:07,600 Speaker 1: You know you're a CEO of a no oil company. 109 00:05:07,880 --> 00:05:10,920 Speaker 3: Absolutely, but look, you've got to give it a little 110 00:05:10,920 --> 00:05:13,520 Speaker 3: bit of time. We saw the results last time Trump 111 00:05:13,600 --> 00:05:16,320 Speaker 3: was in four years in his first term, Trump forty five, 112 00:05:16,640 --> 00:05:17,920 Speaker 3: there was a lot of fear there. 113 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:18,640 Speaker 2: What happened. 114 00:05:18,920 --> 00:05:23,600 Speaker 3: Inflation average below two percent, Energy prices came down, wages 115 00:05:23,680 --> 00:05:28,360 Speaker 3: grew in America, particularly for blue collar working class people. 116 00:05:28,520 --> 00:05:31,400 Speaker 3: It's the same agenda. It's the same agenda this time. 117 00:05:31,760 --> 00:05:33,680 Speaker 1: So let's go to the IRA for a second. You 118 00:05:33,680 --> 00:05:35,479 Speaker 1: guys are reviewing, of course, what parts of the IRA 119 00:05:35,600 --> 00:05:38,599 Speaker 1: will stay. Tax credits. Everyone I talked to loves the 120 00:05:38,640 --> 00:05:39,320 Speaker 1: tax credits. 121 00:05:39,400 --> 00:05:40,040 Speaker 2: They love them. 122 00:05:40,080 --> 00:05:41,680 Speaker 1: They love them for hydrogen, they love them for when, 123 00:05:41,720 --> 00:05:44,440 Speaker 1: they love them for solar. Will you keep those? Well, 124 00:05:44,480 --> 00:05:45,559 Speaker 1: the administration keep them. 125 00:05:45,640 --> 00:05:48,480 Speaker 3: Everybody loves to get other people's money, you know, whether 126 00:05:48,520 --> 00:05:51,479 Speaker 3: it's business or consumers or whatever. But look where that's 127 00:05:51,520 --> 00:05:53,800 Speaker 3: led us, Alex, Look where that's led us almost a 128 00:05:53,920 --> 00:05:56,680 Speaker 3: two trillion dollar deficit in the last year of the 129 00:05:56,680 --> 00:06:00,360 Speaker 3: Biden administration in peacetime with relatively low on them deployment. 130 00:06:00,640 --> 00:06:02,640 Speaker 2: That's just un sustainable. 131 00:06:02,880 --> 00:06:05,280 Speaker 3: If you shovel money out the door, everyone can get 132 00:06:05,279 --> 00:06:07,719 Speaker 3: a sugar high, but you have to pay the piper. 133 00:06:08,200 --> 00:06:09,320 Speaker 2: So there's of course. 134 00:06:09,080 --> 00:06:11,760 Speaker 3: Politics, and it's the House and the Senate will decide 135 00:06:11,920 --> 00:06:15,840 Speaker 3: what from the IRA bill stays and what goes. I'm 136 00:06:15,839 --> 00:06:17,680 Speaker 3: of course advising on that, but I don't have a 137 00:06:17,760 --> 00:06:19,400 Speaker 3: vote in the House or the Senate. 138 00:06:19,760 --> 00:06:21,800 Speaker 2: But we had four years of a lot of. 139 00:06:21,720 --> 00:06:23,279 Speaker 3: Money going out of the door, a lot of it 140 00:06:23,360 --> 00:06:26,159 Speaker 3: in the name of new energies or whatever. And what 141 00:06:26,240 --> 00:06:30,720 Speaker 3: do we get higher priced energy over. 142 00:06:30,440 --> 00:06:32,280 Speaker 2: Those four years. Of course there's going to be a 143 00:06:32,320 --> 00:06:33,320 Speaker 2: different tack this time. 144 00:06:33,600 --> 00:06:35,359 Speaker 1: It will be if we label a clean tech for 145 00:06:35,400 --> 00:06:38,080 Speaker 1: a moment, our analyst at Bloomberg they're called Bloomberg n 146 00:06:38,120 --> 00:06:41,280 Speaker 1: EF said that over two trillion was invested in clean 147 00:06:41,360 --> 00:06:45,960 Speaker 1: tech last year, about double fossil fuels, but nine percent 148 00:06:46,000 --> 00:06:48,680 Speaker 1: of that was from China. If we don't invest in 149 00:06:48,720 --> 00:06:52,680 Speaker 1: clean tech, are we basically giving China free run in 150 00:06:52,720 --> 00:06:55,880 Speaker 1: that industry. And that's exactly not what the administration wants. 151 00:06:56,160 --> 00:06:58,680 Speaker 3: Of course, I rejected label clean tech. That's just a 152 00:06:58,720 --> 00:07:03,000 Speaker 3: marketing term. That means is lower greenhouse gas emissions. But 153 00:07:03,120 --> 00:07:07,520 Speaker 3: much more material intensity, much more land and intermittent solar panels. 154 00:07:07,839 --> 00:07:10,920 Speaker 3: So and you're right, China is huge in the manufacturing 155 00:07:10,920 --> 00:07:14,160 Speaker 3: of these systems. China has built lots of wind and solar, 156 00:07:14,440 --> 00:07:19,120 Speaker 3: but China last year permitted one hundred gigawatts of coal power. 157 00:07:19,520 --> 00:07:22,640 Speaker 3: Their energy system is more hydrocarbon dominant than ours. So 158 00:07:22,680 --> 00:07:26,040 Speaker 3: they're not moving They're not moving that direction. They're building 159 00:07:26,040 --> 00:07:28,720 Speaker 3: a manufacturing industry to sell products to the United. 160 00:07:28,440 --> 00:07:29,280 Speaker 2: States and Europe. 161 00:07:29,480 --> 00:07:31,440 Speaker 3: So far, I would say it's worked for them better 162 00:07:31,480 --> 00:07:33,920 Speaker 3: than it's worked for us. The United States gets just 163 00:07:34,040 --> 00:07:37,920 Speaker 3: over three percent of our primary energy from wind, solar, 164 00:07:37,960 --> 00:07:41,040 Speaker 3: and batteries three percent. Hundreds of billions of dollars for 165 00:07:41,120 --> 00:07:42,120 Speaker 3: three percent. 166 00:07:42,880 --> 00:07:45,720 Speaker 1: Okay, so you're not worried about that. So you don't 167 00:07:45,720 --> 00:07:47,920 Speaker 1: want to like on shore US solar panels. Here in 168 00:07:47,960 --> 00:07:49,480 Speaker 1: a world where you don't like solar panels. 169 00:07:49,840 --> 00:07:52,080 Speaker 3: I'm not saying I don't like solar panels, okay, but 170 00:07:52,080 --> 00:07:55,040 Speaker 3: the look I am. I'm actually I've worked in solar. 171 00:07:55,160 --> 00:07:57,520 Speaker 3: I think solar has got a great future. It's growing rapidly. 172 00:07:57,800 --> 00:08:00,240 Speaker 3: That's not at all true. It's just we do don't 173 00:08:00,240 --> 00:08:02,400 Speaker 3: want to race down the road Europe went down right, 174 00:08:02,440 --> 00:08:03,000 Speaker 3: we could. 175 00:08:02,760 --> 00:08:04,800 Speaker 2: Put lots of windmills up in solar panels as. 176 00:08:04,680 --> 00:08:07,360 Speaker 3: Germany and UK did, in double or triple our electricity 177 00:08:07,440 --> 00:08:10,200 Speaker 3: prices and export our industry. That's just simply not the 178 00:08:10,240 --> 00:08:14,800 Speaker 3: agenda of this administration. We want more energy, more affordable, reliable, 179 00:08:14,840 --> 00:08:18,240 Speaker 3: secure energy that could come from all different sources. But 180 00:08:18,480 --> 00:08:22,600 Speaker 3: ultimately the only constituency being aimed at is the American citizen. 181 00:08:23,480 --> 00:08:25,360 Speaker 1: When we take a look at other forms of energy, 182 00:08:25,360 --> 00:08:27,800 Speaker 1: we haven't brought up natural gas and energy exports, which 183 00:08:27,840 --> 00:08:31,000 Speaker 1: was a huge focus of your speech today at Sarah Week. 184 00:08:31,440 --> 00:08:34,440 Speaker 1: How are the conversations going for the ability to build 185 00:08:34,480 --> 00:08:38,120 Speaker 1: out in the West energy export facilities to be more 186 00:08:38,120 --> 00:08:39,760 Speaker 1: efficient to get energy to Japan. 187 00:08:40,559 --> 00:08:43,040 Speaker 3: Yeah, Look, there's a project in Alaska we're talking about. 188 00:08:43,080 --> 00:08:44,559 Speaker 2: There's several other projects. 189 00:08:44,960 --> 00:08:49,240 Speaker 3: Ultimately, the infrastructure that comes from private industries and private players. 190 00:08:49,679 --> 00:08:53,040 Speaker 3: So our goal is not to decide what the energy 191 00:08:53,080 --> 00:08:55,280 Speaker 3: system is. It's just to get out of the way 192 00:08:55,360 --> 00:08:59,080 Speaker 3: and enable businesses and consumers to decide with their own 193 00:08:59,400 --> 00:09:02,080 Speaker 3: pocketbook and their own investments, what energy is going to be. 194 00:09:02,520 --> 00:09:04,480 Speaker 2: But yes, we've had four years of it. 195 00:09:04,480 --> 00:09:07,360 Speaker 3: Making it very hard to build new infrastructure that has 196 00:09:07,480 --> 00:09:09,200 Speaker 3: changed now. I think you're going to see a lot 197 00:09:09,200 --> 00:09:12,520 Speaker 3: of infrastructure built, but the specific projects will be built 198 00:09:12,520 --> 00:09:16,800 Speaker 3: that'll be determined by consumers and investors builders of those projects. 199 00:09:16,840 --> 00:09:18,800 Speaker 1: You haven't had talks with the Japanese government about this 200 00:09:18,880 --> 00:09:19,280 Speaker 1: or anything. 201 00:09:19,320 --> 00:09:22,520 Speaker 3: Absolutely, we have, okay, tremendous interest in Japan to get 202 00:09:22,600 --> 00:09:23,600 Speaker 3: trust or just thoughts. 203 00:09:24,000 --> 00:09:26,360 Speaker 2: Oh I would say, firm interests, firm interests. Yeah, I 204 00:09:26,440 --> 00:09:26,719 Speaker 2: did that. 205 00:09:26,880 --> 00:09:29,120 Speaker 3: Japan and the United States have had a great alliance 206 00:09:29,320 --> 00:09:32,840 Speaker 3: across many sectors. The United States is blessed with abundance 207 00:09:32,840 --> 00:09:36,120 Speaker 3: of energy. Japan didn't get the same abundances we have, 208 00:09:36,559 --> 00:09:39,719 Speaker 3: but they also have the start of AI and technology 209 00:09:39,760 --> 00:09:43,000 Speaker 3: growing in Japan. They have growing energy demand needs and 210 00:09:43,040 --> 00:09:45,679 Speaker 3: where better to get that energy supplied than from the 211 00:09:45,800 --> 00:09:48,320 Speaker 3: United States. Oh, I think we have very productive dialogues 212 00:09:48,360 --> 00:09:49,160 Speaker 3: going on with Japan. 213 00:09:49,440 --> 00:09:51,840 Speaker 1: And last question for you, because I have to ask it, 214 00:09:52,600 --> 00:09:55,600 Speaker 1: are we going to see increased and harsher sanctions on 215 00:09:55,679 --> 00:09:59,640 Speaker 1: Iran's oil industry and how does that then play into 216 00:09:59,720 --> 00:10:03,120 Speaker 1: the UN as his relationship with Saudi Arabia and OPEQ 217 00:10:03,160 --> 00:10:04,240 Speaker 1: plus and Russia. 218 00:10:05,200 --> 00:10:08,600 Speaker 3: Look, President Trump has great cards in his hands right now. 219 00:10:08,640 --> 00:10:11,520 Speaker 3: Given the American energy system and the willingness to produce 220 00:10:11,559 --> 00:10:15,359 Speaker 3: more energy here. When he was president last time, Iranian 221 00:10:15,400 --> 00:10:18,920 Speaker 3: oil exports shrunk down to very modest levels. It starved 222 00:10:18,920 --> 00:10:21,440 Speaker 3: that regime of money to fund terrorists and to make 223 00:10:21,480 --> 00:10:24,840 Speaker 3: trouble around the world. Biden didn't remove those sanctions, but 224 00:10:24,880 --> 00:10:27,800 Speaker 3: he stopped enforcing him That enriched Iran. And now we've 225 00:10:27,800 --> 00:10:30,679 Speaker 3: seen what's happened with the hu Thies, hesbl and Hamas 226 00:10:30,760 --> 00:10:34,320 Speaker 3: it's been mayhem. So is President Trump looking to stop 227 00:10:34,400 --> 00:10:35,079 Speaker 3: the mayhem and. 228 00:10:35,040 --> 00:10:36,959 Speaker 2: Bring peace to the world. Absolutely. 229 00:10:37,400 --> 00:10:40,880 Speaker 3: Can we afford the squeezing off of Iranian oil exports? 230 00:10:40,920 --> 00:10:44,559 Speaker 3: Absolutely from the United States number one, but also from 231 00:10:44,600 --> 00:10:47,600 Speaker 3: our allies abroad. You know, I think people realize America 232 00:10:47,640 --> 00:10:50,760 Speaker 3: is open for business again, and we're seeing increased oil 233 00:10:50,760 --> 00:10:53,560 Speaker 3: production and increased investments not just in America but around 234 00:10:53,600 --> 00:10:53,960 Speaker 3: the world.