The Oklahoman

New alliance president looks forward to the future

- By Jack Money Business writer jmoney@oklahoman.com

Optimism and a stoic ability to plan for the future are key attributes of oil and gas executives.

Brook A. Simmons, who became the president of the Petroleum

Alliance of Oklahoma on May 1, can' t wait to see what they come up with next.

Over the years, he has watched t he energy industry in Oklahoma and the nation experience several significan­t collapses in the 1980 s, in 1997, in 2001,2008, only to rebound stronger than before.

He expects nothing less today.

Simmons said energy industry executives across Oklahoma and the nation have proven time and again they can adapt their businesses to address whatever challenges they have faced.

“We have seen this sort of cataclysmi­c drop before ,” Simmons said. “But one of the untold stories, I think, is that the U.S. shale revolution really drove the nation' s economic recovery from 2008 until 2014.

“We will recover from this again, and we already have seen what many people think was the bottom,” Simmons said, noting demand for refined products already is rebounding.

Simmons started his career three decades ago as a journalist before working for U.S. Sen. Don Nickles and t hen a U.S. representa­tive from Kentucky through 2004.

Simmons served as the Oklahoma Independen­t Petroleum Associatio­n' s federal lobbyist from 20082015, then worked on local, state and federal government issues for Encana (now known

as Ovintiv).

Beyond that, he served on the executive committee of the board of directors for the Oklahoma Oil & Gas Associatio­n from 2015-2019 and helped merge it with the OIPA to become the Petroleum Alliance of Oklahoma.

Before returning home to Oklahoma this year, Simmons briefly represente­d private clients on federal issues in Washington, D.C.

Simmons currently serves on the board of directors for the Domestic Energy Producers Alliance.

Previously, he served on boards for the Western Energy Alliance, the North Dakota Petroleum Council,

Royalty Owners & Producers Educationa­l Coalition (ROPE), and the Utah Petroleum Associatio­n.

He also served on Utah Governor Gary Herbert' s Energy Advisory Council and, for a time, served as a spokesman for the American Sportfishi­ng Associatio­n.

David D. Le Norman, the petroleum alliance' s chairman, noted Simmons is a perfect fit to lead the alliance into the future.

“It is fitting that he is coming home to Oklahoma in order to oversee the organizati­on where he has such deep roots,” Le Norman said.

Simmons grew up in Ardmore as his father, an

agronomist, worked at t he Noble Foundation. An uncle, meanwhile, made his living working as part of the state's energy industry.

Simmons said he l earned early on that Oklahoma' s energy industry is a vital economic driver to the state and its residents, adding it remains so today, given that it generated a third of the state's economic output in 2018.

Oklahomans earned $36.8 billion from oil and gas in 2018, with mineral owners receiving $30.4 billion in royalty payments since 2003.

“Those are the dr iver sin every other sector of Oklahoma's economy,” Simmons said. We see it on

Main Street, in profession­al and business services, in leisure and hospitalit­y, in constructi­on, manufactur­ing, transporta­tion and financial activities. We see it ripple across the entire realm. The oil and gas sector is Oklahoma's life blood.”

As for the current crisis, Simmons said that too will pass.

“The industry will look different once we emerge from this, but I guarantee you there will be new businesses, products, services and efficienci­es that will be created as a result of this crisis, and we will be preparing for what I like to call the next chapter in our extraordin­ary story.

“That's exciting.”

 ?? [THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] ?? Rigs drill wells on leases in the STACK play of the Anadarko Basin in 2018. Brook Simmons, executive director of the Petroleum Alliance of Oklahoma, expects the energy industry across Oklahoma and the nation to recover, he said this week.
[THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] Rigs drill wells on leases in the STACK play of the Anadarko Basin in 2018. Brook Simmons, executive director of the Petroleum Alliance of Oklahoma, expects the energy industry across Oklahoma and the nation to recover, he said this week.
 ??  ?? Simmons
Simmons

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