Shell to cut 2,200 more jobs in face of weak oil prices
Business
By
Reuters
| May 25, 2016
Royal Dutch Shell will cut a further 2,200 jobs, taking its target for layoffs to 12,500 by the end of the year, the Anglo-Dutch oil firm said on Wednesday, as it cuts deeper in the face of weak oil prices.
Shell let go 7,500 staff and direct contractors last year and previously said 2,800 jobs would be cut with the integration of BG Group.
Whilst the cuts are small in comparison to the overall amount of people employed in the oil and gas industry, Shell's 12,500 job reductions are equal to the entire workforce of social media company Facebook.
The combined Shell-BG company employed around 94,600 staff at the end of 2015.
Shell announced that out of the additional 2,200 job losses, 475 will come from its upstream UK and Ireland business.
READ MORE
New bid to double Kenya-UK trade to Sh680b
Why blended finance is gaining traction in Kenya's search for sustainable funding
'We are coming for you,' Why KRA has suspended nil tax filings
EAC launches first regional framework to strengthen pandemic preparedness
Which Singapore? Controller of Budget downplays Ruto's dream
IMF to Kenya: Anti-corruption reforms key to new funding deal
New CBK loan pricing model sparks lower lending costs
NCBA to ride on Nedbank's muscle in regional expansion
Kenya, India seek strategic reset in trade, security and technology
Factories review the green leaf payment following farmers demand
"Despite the improvements that we have made to our business, current market conditions remain challenging," said Paul Goodfellow, Shell's vice president for UK & Ireland, after breaking the news to employees in Scotland's Aberdeen.
The oil major has significantly reduced its annual spending target to below $30 billion and is selling $30 billion (20 billion pounds) worth of assets to weather weak oil prices which brought its 2015 earnings to the lowest in over a decade.
Shell said it expects net job losses in 2016 to be lower than 5,000 due to recruitment in IT and at the graduate level.
Shell started offering employees in Britain and the Netherlands voluntary redundancy last month.