• CERAWEEK
  • March 10 - 14, 2025

Dustin Meyer

American Petroleum Institute

Senior Vice President of Policy, Economics and Regulatory Affairs

Dustin Meyer is Senior Vice President of Policy, Economics and Regulatory Affairs, leading API’s public policy departments and overseeing the organization’s economics, research, and regulatory functions. He previously served as API’s Vice President of Natural Gas Markets, dealing with issues related to domestic and global natural gas markets, as well as natural gas technology and innovation including renewable natural gas, differentiated/responsibly sourced natural gas, hydrogen and the use of CCUS in the power sector. Prior to joining API, Meyer led analytics, forecasting and consulting services on global LNG and renewable energy markets for Energy Ventures Analysis. He also held analysis positions at PFC Energy and then IHS Energy on upstream investment in North American oil and natural gas, including liquefaction projects in the U.S. and Canada. Meyer also worked at ICF International on the transportation policy team and for various NGOs. He earned his undergraduate degree at Princeton University and received his Master’s focused on Energy Policy & Economics from Yale University.

Sessions With Dustin Meyer

Wednesday, 20 March

  • 11:30am - 12:00pm (CST) / 20/mar/2024 04:30 pm - 20/mar/2024 05:00 pm

    Decarbonizing Upstream Oil & Gas: Winning strategies for real results

    The upstream oil & gas journey to lower the carbon intensity of operations is seeing tangible results. That journey will become more complex as low-hanging fruit disappears and operators tackle the integrated challenge of balancing rapid learning and maturing new technologies to further decarbonize operations. What abatement initiatives are showing the greatest—and the least—promise? Do companies have the information to make actionable decisions based on marginal abatement cost curves (MACC)? What are the critical technologies that can deliver accelerated progress? How do companies prioritize and make trade-offs among very different options? What internal and external factors will make the biggest impact on success by 2030?