September 22, 2025

DENR to Become C&E on October 1

Contact: Patrick Courreges, 225-342-0510

Re-organization into Department of Conservation and Energy to be finalized at start of month

Along with its organizational restructuring, the agency has also undergone a rebranding that features a new logo, reflecting its updated mission and identity.

BATON ROUGE — Beginning Oct. 1, the Department of Energy and Natural Resources (DENR) will formally complete its re-organization into the Department of Conservation and Energy (C&E).

The re-organization is the result of nearly two years of work, involving legislative actions, input from public stakeholders and intra-agency research and planning, spurred by Gov. Jeff Landry’s executive order, JML 24-13, to then-DENR Secretary Tyler Gray and the Departmental Review for Innovation and Visionary Enhancement (DRIVE) Initiative Gray carried out as a result of that order.

Gray stepped down as secretary earlier this month, with Deputy Secretary Dustin Davidson becoming Secretary, after having worked closely with Gray on planning and implementing the re-organization.

“Throughout this effort, we have worked to craft an approach that is guided by the core principles of transparency in communication and processes, balance in addressing the needs of economic growth and environmental stewardship, and solutions based in technology, with clear guidance to industry and the public,” Davidson said. “In many ways, this agency has still been doing things the way it did when first created as DNR nearly 50 years ago. Technology, industry and environmental best practices have changed a great deal over those decades, and it’s time this agency caught up.”

DENR has previously been made up of four primary divisions – Office of the Secretary, including back office financial functions and the state Energy Office; Office of Conservation, primarily dealing with oil/gas/injection/water wells and pipelines, with regulatory authority separate from the rest of DENR; Office of Coastal Management, dealing with protection of vegetated wetlands in the state’s Coastal Zone; and the Office of Mineral Resources, acting for the state as mineral rights owner in matters of leasing mineral production.

As C&E, the agency will be organized into six divisions, better tailored to specific roles and operations than the previous broad subject matter separations that often led to information silos and inefficient duplication of efforts.

Those offices will be:

“There will still be an adjustment period for some time to come – for our staff, as we break decades worth of old habits and workflows that were inefficient but familiar; for the regulated community, who we hope to see embracing the changes we are making to create understandable and predictable processes; and to the people we serve, as we make the changes needed to set and maintain modern standards for environmental protection and resource management,” Davidson said. 

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C&E Secretary Dustin Davidson
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