§A · Dispatch · Landing
Chevron's Boeing Business Jet returns to Houston from Pittsburgh the week of historic layoffs and a major AI data center deal
If aboard, Chevron executives would be arriving back at Sugar Land Regional just days after announcing up to 8,000 job cuts and a 20-year power agreement with Microsoft.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Chevron
Chevron
Chevron's Boeing Business Jet, tail N884GL, was tracked flying from Rock Airport near Pittsburgh to Sugar Land Regional Airport outside Houston on June 24, a 2-hour-15-minute hop that landed shortly after 5:30 p.m. local time. The aircraft departed the Pittsburgh area at 4:16 p.m. Eastern and touched down in Texas at 5:31 p.m. Central, a route that traces a straight line across the Appalachian and Ozark corridors.
If Chevron leadership was aboard, the return to Houston would come the same week the company disclosed plans to cut 15 to 20 percent of its global workforce — as many as 8,000 jobs — in the largest layoff in its history, per Hoodline. It would also follow the June 22 announcement of Project Kilby, a 20-year, 2.67-gigawatt natural gas plant that Chevron will build off-grid in West Texas to power a Microsoft AI data center, as covered by Data Center Knowledge. The Pittsburgh stop may have involved discussions about Chevron's Marcellus Shale operations or a separate business meeting, though no specific event has been confirmed.
The flight fits a pattern of recent cross-country movement: the same aircraft flew from Houston to the New York area on June 22, and earlier in the month made multiple shuttles between Houston and the Permian Basin, including a brief hop to Carlsbad, New Mexico, during the layoff rollout. The consistent use of the Boeing Business Jet for trips to operational hubs and corporate centers suggests senior executives are actively managing the company's post-merger restructuring and new energy ventures.
Aboard the Boeing Business Jet


The aircraft
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