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Oil and Gas Industry Layoffs Accelerate with Lower Prices

Posted on 10/24/25 at 2:03 pm
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
27094 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 2:03 pm
quote:

Over the past few months, the U.S. and European supermajors, as well as large independent producers, smaller players, and the world’s top services providers, have announced – either publicly or via internal memos – that they begin processes to eliminate roles, office-based jobs, and contractor numbers.

Chevron, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, BP, Shell, Equinor, Harbour Energy, APA Corp, OMV, Exxon’s Canadian affiliate Imperial Oil, Halliburton, and SLB have all began layoffs in certain geographies and markets, according to a snapshot of the job cuts in the oil and gas sector compiled by Reuters.

Behind the thousands of layoffs announced in the industry lie two major driving forces—lower international crude oil prices compared to last year, and the many mergers and acquisitions that the companies completed in the past two years.


quote:

ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, and BP have announced thousands of job cuts, with some planning to reduce their workforce by as much as 25% by the end of 2027.

BP has already reduced contractor numbers by 3,200, and expects a further 1,200 contractors to exit by the end of 2025, BP’s chief financial officer Kate Thomson said on the Q2 earnings call in August. Moreover, BP expects its ongoing organizational transformation to see 6,200 roles impacted by the end of 2025, out of an office-based workforce of 40,000 employees.

Chevron, which bought Hess Corporation for $53 billion, has said it would reduce its workforce by 20% by the end of 2026 as part of wide cost cuts. This includes 800 jobs in the Permian.

ConocoPhillips, which acquired Marathon Oil Corporation last year, plans to slash workforce numbers by up to 25% across functions and geographies to simplify the organization and cut costs.

SLB is said to be reducing job numbers in wider reorganization, while Halliburton is also reportedly cutting roles in recent weeks, after laying off nearly 300 employees in Argentina earlier this year, Reuters notes.


LINK

Anyone here want to buy my truck nuts from me?
Posted by TBoy
Kalamazoo
Member since Dec 2007
27244 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 2:26 pm to
Layoffs are just getting going. With Saudi Arabia increasing production month over month through the end of the year (at least), there will be a lot more blood letting in the industry.
Posted by CitizenK
BR
Member since Aug 2019
13603 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 2:50 pm to
Much of it overdue to automation and mergers.
Posted by Hotgin
Kazakhstan
Member since Jan 2014
1497 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 3:13 pm to
More like centralization(foreign based centers for certain departments) and mergers.
Posted by evil cockroach
27.98N // 86.92E
Member since Nov 2007
8817 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 3:19 pm to
RIP "Safety Engineers"
Posted by The Cow Goes Moo Moo
Bucktown
Member since Nov 2012
3948 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 3:24 pm to
And this is part of the reason why my father strongly advised me not to follow in his footsteps working in O&G
Posted by CitizenK
BR
Member since Aug 2019
13603 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:00 pm to
quote:


More like centralization(foreign based centers for certain departments) and mergers.


A friend who retired last year from a downhole rental tool company told me that today's drilling engineers don't know anything about downhole tools. The same with the CEO of an indie chemical company about chemical engineers who have graduated in the last decade. Zero critical thinking skills. They depend on Google and AI which gives a LOT of wrong answers.
Posted by lsuoilengr
Member since Aug 2008
5297 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:03 pm to
I just got off the Stena Evolution and they have 4 years left on their contract.
Posted by bayouvette
Raceland
Member since Oct 2005
5550 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:07 pm to
Nothing new with O&G.

When its good its great. When its bad good chance to get the pink slip. Been there on a couple occasions.
Posted by notiger1997
Metairie
Member since May 2009
61227 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:20 pm to
The chemical industry is struggling a lot and starting layoffs as well.
Posted by cajuns td
Prairieville
Member since Jun 2019
288 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:30 pm to
quote:

The chemical industry is struggling a lot and starting layoffs as well.


Yeah, 2025 is pretty rough and the forecast for 2026 doesn't look any better
Posted by Spankum
Miss-sippi
Member since Jan 2007
60160 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:48 pm to
Petroleum is the most interesting of all disciplines in my opinion. I just couldn’t stand the cyclical nature of it. As a result, I majored in ME and I am damn glad that I made that choice.
Posted by Motownsix
Boise
Member since Oct 2022
3024 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:50 pm to
quote:

Layoffs are just getting going. With Saudi Arabia increasing production month over month through the end of the year (at least), there will be a lot more blood letting in the industry.


When was the last time something like this happened? What’s the thing in common?
Posted by Motownsix
Boise
Member since Oct 2022
3024 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:52 pm to
quote:

When its good its great. When its bad good chance to get the pink slip. Been there on a couple occasions.


God give me one more oil boom and I promise I won’t piss it away this time.
Posted by GREENHEAD22
Member since Nov 2009
20473 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 4:56 pm to
While being on a rig with a long contract is better than the opposite, it is far from a guarantee of a job.

You with the operator or the rig/service?
This post was edited on 10/24/25 at 4:57 pm
Posted by Diseasefreeforall
Member since Oct 2012
7093 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 5:07 pm to
quote:


Petroleum is the most interesting of all disciplines in my opinion. I just couldn’t stand the cyclical nature of it. As a result, I majored in ME and I am damn glad that I made that choice.
There are plenty of jobs in the industry not affected by cyclicality provided that you aren't on the frontlines upstream.
Posted by hubertcumberdale
Member since Nov 2009
6767 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 5:23 pm to
quote:

Petroleum is the most interesting of all disciplines in my opinion. I just couldn’t stand the cyclical nature of it.


spoiler: it sucks arse (the cyclical nature of it anyway)
This post was edited on 10/24/25 at 5:28 pm
Posted by hubertcumberdale
Member since Nov 2009
6767 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 5:24 pm to
quote:

God give me one more oil boom and I promise I won’t piss it away this time.



easier said than done
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
27094 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 5:52 pm to
quote:

The chemical industry is struggling a lot and starting layoffs as well.


Yep. The market for ChemE’s coming out of college right now ain’t nearly as good as just 2-3 years ago.

Kind of depressing to see.
This post was edited on 10/24/25 at 5:53 pm
Posted by GREENHEAD22
Member since Nov 2009
20473 posts
Posted on 10/24/25 at 5:59 pm to
shite, most of the majors are paying the same as when I came out in 07. Wages have stagnanted big time in the industry. With plenty other catching up and surpassing. I get laid off I am going into technical sales. You can make FU money with the correct job and being good.
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