- Royal Dutch Shell PLC announced plans to slash 6,500 jobs Thursday amid a slump in oil prices that has sent a wave of job cuts rippling through the industry.
- Shellās job reductions came as ChevronĀ Corp. said Wednesday it would cut 1,500 jobs, while U.K. utility CentricaĀ PLC said Thursday it would slash 600 positionsĀ and work to shrink its oil-and-gas production division.
- Even deeper cuts have emerged this week at oil services firms, which big energy companies are squeezing for savings; SaipemĀ SpA of Italy, for instance, said it would slash 8,800 jobs over the next two years.
- The moves demonstrate how energy companies are moving to slash further to cope with a sustained oil price collapse that they now see lasting for a longer time. Shell, BPĀ PLC, Franceās TotalĀ SAand EniĀ SpA of Italy have all outlined plans in their second quarter results to deepen spending cutsĀ that began earlier this year when oil prices reached lows below $50 a barrel, down from highs of $114 a barrel last year.
- Shellās job cuts were announced along with second-quarter earnings that saw its profit fall by 33% from the same period last year, to $3.4 billion compared with $5.1 billion on a current cost of supplies basisāa measure similar to the net income reported in the U.S. As with its peers, Shellās exploration and production, or upstream business, suffered worst, tumbling to $774 million, down nearly 80% from a year earlier.
- Shellās oil production fell 11% to 2.7 million barrels of oil equivalent as the company undertook maintenance at several fields and continued a $20 billion divestment program due to complete at the end of the year.
Source: Wall Street Journal







