100,000 industry layoffs over oil price slump
LONDON, May 4, 2015
Layoffs in the oil and gas industry are nearing 100,000 worldwide since oil price started declining late last summer, a report said.
Oilfield service companies Schlumberger, Baker Hughes, and Halliburton announced layoffs of around 20,000, 10,500, and 9,000 employees respectively, while E&Ps BP and Chevron each announced layoffs approaching 10,000 of their employees, according to Douglas-Westwood, a leading provider of market research in engineering and energy industry.
According to a survey completed in January 2015 by Rigzone, 44 per cent of the surveyed companies indicated that they plan to hire fewer workers over the next six months while 5 per cent indicated they plan to completely halt hiring efforts.
Although the oil and gas industry employs numbers of low-skilled workers, the lifeblood of the industry is the variety of specialised engineers, technicians and rig crews who boast years of involvement in the field along with formal training or university degrees.
Continuing widespread layoffs, frozen or reduced pay checks and the effects a lengthy downturn will have on the industry can dissuade such individuals from pursuing careers in oil and gas and encourage college graduates to move into more stable industries.
Just as the legacy of the 1980s-90s created a shortage of experienced workers – contributing to rising costs, execution challenges, and safety concerns – the numbers of lost personnel, both current and future, threatens the long-term capacity of the industry. To many in the business it feels like history is repeating itself. – TradeArabia News Service