West Virginia Executive Spring 2019 | Page 20

[ community ] Young Guns “I chose to stay in West Virginia because there’s a real generational opportunity with the shale gas resource here. If I can be one small part of creating jobs for West Virginians, I’m all in.” Maribeth Anderson In the five years since Maribeth Ander- son, director of government relations for Antero Resources, appeared on the cover of West Virginia Executive magazine’s Fall 2013 issue as a member of the Young Guns Class of 2014, much has changed for this go-getter. Leaving her role as senior director of government relations at Chesapeake Energy, she accepted the position of director of community and government relations at Southwestern Energy before joining Antero. Through these changes, her commitment to both her community and West Virginia’s energy industry have remained the same. As a woman succeeding in a histori- cally male-dominated industry, Anderson admits this path wasn’t her first choice. “I enjoyed a 14-year career in TV news before getting involved in the energy industry,” she says. “When a big shale operator came to town and wanted to tell their story, I got on board with them. I left the TV station 18 WEST VIRGINIA EXECUTIVE that day thinking about how much I liked those natural gas people but that no other career could ever be as exciting and fun for me as TV news. I was wrong.” Since joining the energy industry in 2008, Anderson has watched it evolve and expand in the Mountain State. “It’s a much more collaborative industry today than it was when I got involved 11 years ago,” she says. “The natural gas industry was used to being quiet and keeping to itself, but the nature of drilling shale wells means we must communicate with landowners and others affected by gas development. West Virginia is now on the global energy stage with the largest natural gas processing facility in North America being located here.” In 2016, Anderson was elected president of the West Virginia Oil and Natural Gas Association (WVONGA), making her the first woman to hold that position in the history of an organization that has been around for more than 100 years. She made the most of her time in this leadership role by helping bring positive change for both its members and the industry as a whole. “In the two years I served as president, we got some important things done, par- ticularly at the Legislature, as we needed to get some old regulations updated,” she says. When Anderson was chosen as a Young Gun, her level of community service made her stand out among the nominees. De- spite the demands of her job today, she continues to be active with organizations and associations whose missions are important to her. Currently, she is a board member for WVONGA, West Virginia Manufacturers Association, Ohio Oil & Gas Association and United Methodist Foundation of West Virginia, Inc. She is also on the executive committee for the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce, and she plans to be active with the West Virginia chapter of Women’s Energy Network. Anderson could take her time and talent anywhere in the world, but this West Virginia native believes she is ex- actly where she is meant to be. “I really do think it’s a case of right place, right time, right people,” she says. “I graduated from Marshall University and chose to stay in West Virginia because there’s a real generational opportunity with the shale gas resource here. A vast supply of inexpensive natural gas entices man- ufacturers to locate here because they use it as feedstock. If I can be one small part of creating jobs for West Virginians, I’m all in.” Anderson is excited about the future of energy in West Virginia and the oppor- tunities it will create for her neighbors and coworkers. “We will always keep evolving and improving,” she says. “What’s been important to me—and important to our industry—is the way we use water and take care of the land, the way we hire more and more local people and the way we take our place as a leader in the future of West Virginia’s economy. There’s no place I’d rather be.”  MAGGIE MATSKO RICK LEE