Summit Midstream Partners, LP Promotes Jesse G. Wood as Senior Vice President of Engineering, Construction, and Operations
February 07, 2013 at 07:38 pm IST
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Summit Midstream Partners, LP announced that Jesse G. Wood has been promoted to Senior Vice President of Engineering, Construction, and Operations. Mr. Wood will assume responsibility for all engineering, construction, and operations efforts in the Rockies Region. Mr. Wood has over 32 years of experience working in the Rocky Mountain region developing, building, and operating midstream facilities. Mr. Wood began serving as Senior Vice President of Engineering, Construction, and Operations of Summit Midstream Partners, LLC in January 2013. Prior to his current role, he served as Vice President and Regional Manager for the Rockies Region from the time that he joined Summit Investments in April 2012 until January 2013. Prior to joining Summit Investments, Mr. Wood worked for nine years as the South Rockies Midstream Team Leader for Encana, executing and operating midstream projects in the DJ, Paradox, and Piceance basins, where his teams developed midstream assets to support a 1.2 Bcf/day gathering system.
Mr. Wood will report to Steve Newby, President and CEO of Summit Investments.
Summit Midstream Partners, LP is a limited partnership focused on development, owning, and operating midstream energy infrastructure assets, primarily shale formations, in the continental United States. Its segments include Rockies, Permian, Northeast, Piceance and Barnett. It provides natural gas, crude oil and produced water gathering, processing and transportation services pursuant to primarily long-term, fee-based agreements with customers and counterparties in five unconventional resource basins: the Appalachian Basin, which includes the Marcellus shale formation in West Virginia; the Williston Basin, which includes the Bakken and Three Forks shale formations in North Dakota; the Denver-Julesburg Basin, which includes the Niobrara and Codell shale formations in Colorado and Wyoming; the Fort Worth Basin, which includes the Barnett Shale formation in Texas; and the Piceance Basin that includes the Mesaverde formation as well as the Mancos and Niobrara shale formations in Colorado.