Bloomberg Talks: Lorenzo Simonelli Talks Oil, Energy Projects
Date: February 24, 2026
Guest: Lorenzo Simonelli, CEO of Baker Hughes
Host: Bloomberg
Episode Overview
This episode features a timely conversation with Lorenzo Simonelli, CEO of Baker Hughes, centered on the dynamics influencing global energy markets—especially oil and natural gas. Amid geopolitics, shifting supply-demand fundamentals, and rapid growth in energy-hungry sectors such as data centers, Simonelli offers insights into Baker Hughes’ role, U.S. energy policy, and the long-term outlook for fossil fuels and LNG exports.
Key Discussion Points and Insights
1. Oil Market Volatility and Geopolitical Risk
[01:01–03:37]
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Market Context: Oil prices are near a seven-month high due to geopolitical tensions (notably US-Iran relations) and fears over energy chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz.
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Short-Term vs Long-Term:
- Simonelli stresses that current price volatility is "very much driven by geopolitics and also what's happening day to day," rather than just fundamental factors.
“It’s hard to predict what’s going to take place...from a Baker Hughes perspective it’s the fundamentals [that matter]. When we look at the long term, demand is increasing.” — Lorenzo Simonelli [01:57]
- Simonelli stresses that current price volatility is "very much driven by geopolitics and also what's happening day to day," rather than just fundamental factors.
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Supply-Glut Perception:
- The host points out a seeming oversupply, but Simonelli frames this as temporary, predicting a “correction into 27, 28.”
“As we look at 27, 28, we've got strong demand signals…you see that coming correction…and the fundamentals with population increase, energy demand increasing, AI, oil and gas is on the rise.” — Simonelli [02:48]
- The host points out a seeming oversupply, but Simonelli frames this as temporary, predicting a “correction into 27, 28.”
2. Demand, Supply Balance and the Future of Energy
[03:37–05:41]
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Gas is the “Winner”:
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Simonelli underscores that while oil has an ample supply, gas is projected for significant growth.
“If you look at gas, gas is the winner longer term...we see gas growing significantly...by 20% [by 2040].” — Simonelli [03:54]
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Natural gas is key to meeting expanding data center energy needs and generating electricity via gas turbines.
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Meeting New Energy Demands:
- Baker Hughes anticipates a surge in turbine orders and is scaling capacity to meet this demand.
"We recently took up our estimate from a turbine perspective to 3 billion of orders during 25 to 27. That's a doubling of what we previously saw." — Simonelli [04:53]
- The data center sector is expected to see capital investment grow from $500B (2025) to over $1T by 2030.
- Baker Hughes anticipates a surge in turbine orders and is scaling capacity to meet this demand.
3. U.S. Energy Policy, LNG Exports, and Global Influence
[05:41–07:29]
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U.S. Energy Dominance:
- The Biden administration is described as supportive of energy export growth, deregulation, and faster permitting.
“We’ve seen this administration be very supportive...10 years ago, we didn’t have any LNG being exported, and today [the US is] one of the largest producers and exporters of LNG around the world.” — Simonelli [05:56]
- The Biden administration is described as supportive of energy export growth, deregulation, and faster permitting.
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Supplying Europe and Beyond:
- US LNG exports are critical for Europe’s energy security, reducing reliance on Russian gas.
- There is a "long runway" for expansion:
“We see there needing to be an installed base capacity of LNG by 2035 of 950 mtpa. And so there’s a long runway here out into the next decade.” — Simonelli [06:55]
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
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On Geopolitical Influence:
“It’s hard to predict what’s going to take place...the aspect of price is very much driven by geopolitics.” — Lorenzo Simonelli [01:57] -
On Market Fundamentals:
“As we look at 27, 28, we've got strong demand signals and...you see that coming correction...Population increase, energy demand increasing, AI, oil and gas is on the rise.” — Simonelli [02:48] -
On Energy Transition:
“Gas is the winner longer term...an increase in natural gas by 20% [by 2040].” — Simonelli [03:54] -
On Data Center Growth:
“We recently took up our estimate from a turbine perspective to 3 billion of orders during 25 to 27. That's a doubling of what we previously saw.” — Simonelli [04:53] -
On U.S. Policy Progress:
“We’ve seen this administration be very supportive...Is everything solved yet? No, but they’re working towards that and continuing to be an energy supplier to the world.” — Simonelli [05:56] -
On LNG and the Future:
“There’s a long Runway here out into the next decade.” — Simonelli [06:55]
Important Timestamps
- [01:01] — Opening market context; oil price and Middle East geopolitics
- [01:57] — Simonelli on drivers of price and long-term demand
- [02:48] — Discussion of oversupply, demand signals and correction window
- [03:54] — Gas market prospects and role in electrification/data centers
- [04:53] — Capital spending and Baker Hughes’ business in data centers
- [05:56] — U.S. policy, LNG export growth, political support
- [06:55] — Discussion on U.S. supplying Europe and longer-term LNG needs
Conclusion
Lorenzo Simonelli offers a measured, forward-looking perspective on oil and gas markets, arguing that current oversupply and price volatility are temporary in the face of long-run demand growth. He positions gas as the key winner in the energy mix, with data centers and infrastructure expansion underpinning robust business for Baker Hughes. U.S. policy, he contends, is largely supportive of maintaining global energy influence—especially through LNG exports—with plenty of headroom for future growth.
