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Halliburton jet lands in Pittsburgh ahead of Appalachia energy summits
The oilfield services firm arrives as key conferences on AI, data centers, and electric innovation unfold in the region.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Halliburton

Halliburton
Halliburton flew from Portland's Hillsboro Airport to Pittsburgh International Airport on May 6, touching down just after 2:50 a.m. the next day. The Gulfstream G550, tail number N235DX, sliced through the night sky for 3 hours and 43 minutes, reaching speeds over 640 knots and altitudes above 45,000 feet. Such executive hops are routine for the Houston-based giant, but this West Coast-to-Pennsylvania jaunt stands out.
The arrival coincides with a flurry of energy-focused events in Pittsburgh the following week, including the Appalachian AI Energy Conference on May 14 at the Hilton Garden Inn Southpointe, as announced by organizers Shale Directories. The Electric Expo follows on May 12 at Rivers Casino, per the Electric League of Western Pennsylvania, while the second annual PA Data Center & Energy Innovation Summit gathers stakeholders mid-month, according to the Pittsburgh Technology Council. For Halliburton, with its deep ties to upstream operations, these forums offer a wry nod to the sector's pivot toward tech-infused efficiency in the Marcellus Shale heartland.
Halliburton's six-aircraft fleet—three Gulfstreams and three Citations—typically ferries leaders like CEO Jeff Miller to recurring haunts in New Orleans, Washington, Riyadh, Melbourne, and London, mirroring its global rig presence. This Pittsburgh pit stop, however, highlights domestic priorities, especially as Miller described the U.S. oil rebound in its 'early innings' during April earnings, per a Fortune report. No stranger to Appalachia's gas plays, the firm keeps a watchful eye on regional opportunities.
Aboard the Gulfstream G550


The aircraft
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