§A · Dispatch · Landing
Chevron lands in Sugar Land the day its CEO warns White House of gas price surge
The energy giant's Boeing Business Jet returns from the Permian Basin as Mike Wirth flags critically low fuel inventories.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Chevron
Chevron
Chevron flew from Midland International Air and Space Port to Sugar Land Regional Airport on June 11, a 64-minute hop in its Boeing Business Jet N884GL. The flight touched down just before midnight, closing a day that saw the company's CEO, Mike Wirth, deliver a stark message to the Trump administration: gasoline prices are about to get ugly.
Earlier that day, Wirth and other oil executives privately warned the White House that fuel inventories are approaching multi-decade lows, per a report from cryptobriefing.com. The same week, Wirth told Bloomberg that multiple vessels in the Strait of Hormuz had suffered attacks, accelerating plans for pipeline bypass infrastructure. Chevron's own exposure in the Middle East has been relatively light — a temporary shutdown of Israel's Leviathan gas field — but the broader supply crunch is reshaping global logistics.
The Midland-to-Houston shuttle is a familiar route for Chevron's fleet. Recent flight logs show multiple trips between the Permian Basin and the company's Houston-area headquarters, reflecting the relentless pace of domestic production as Chevron works to fill gaps left by disrupted overseas flows. For an energy giant navigating a bumpy summer, the pattern is less about spectacle and more about the quiet mechanics of keeping the lights on.
Aboard the Boeing Business Jet


The aircraft
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