§A · Dispatch · Landing
Halliburton flies from Pittsburgh to Las Vegas the week of a North America growth push.
CEO Jeff Miller arrives in Las Vegas following a quarter that signaled early recovery in U.S. oilfield activity.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Halliburton

Halliburton
Halliburton’s Gulfstream G550, tail N235DX flew from Pittsburgh to Harry Reid International Airport on Monday, touching down at 3:14 p.m. after a 3-hour 52-minute crossing. The trip comes three days after the company reported first-quarter earnings that surprised analysts by showing North America is in the “early innings of a recovery,” as CEO Jeff Miller put it during Halliburton’s April 21 call, per The Motley Fool’s transcript.
Las Vegas this week hosts the Offshore Technology Conference, a major industry gathering where oilfield service contractors meet with operators. Miller is expected to meet customers and investors, capitalizing on what Halliburton described as a shift from “energy security is a talking point” to “energy security is driving activity,” as countries prioritize domestic supply.” The company noted its second-quarter calendar is already largely booked.
The Pittsburgh origin, by contrast, points to the company’s other business lines — Halliburton’s Pittsburgh-area offices serve its drilling and completions work in the Marcellus shale. The Gulfstream had just returned from a multi-city European swing May 7-11 that hit London, Amsterdam and Liverpool, typical of Halliburton’s regular rotation between its Houston base, the Middle East rig fleets and international management meetings.
Aboard the Gulfstream G550


The aircraft
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