The Jerusalem Post

Oil major BP to cut 15% of workforce

- • By SHADIA NASRALLA and RON BOUSSO

LONDON (Reuters) – BP will cut about 15% of its workforce in response to the coronaviru­s crisis and as part of chief executive Bernard Looney’s plan to shift the oil and gas major to renewable energy, it said on Monday.

Looney told employees in a global online call that the London-based company will cut 10,000 jobs from the current 70,100.

“We will now begin a process that will see close to 10,000 people leaving BP – most by the end of this year,” Looney said.

Reuters had earlier reported the planned job cuts, citing three company sources.

The affected roles will be mostly senior office-based positions and not frontline operationa­l staff, the company said of the cuts that follow April’s announceme­nt of a 25% reduction in 2020 spending after the coronaviru­s pandemic brought an unpreceden­ted drop in demand for oil.

BP also said it would find $2.5 billion in cost savings by the end of 2021 through the digitaliza­tion and integratio­n of its businesses.

The job reductions are also part of Looney’s drive to make the 111-year-old oil company more nimble as it prepares for the shift to low-carbon energy, the sources said.

“It was always part of the plan to make BP a leaner, faster-moving and lower-carbon company,” Looney said.

Looney last month announced a large round of senior management appointmen­ts, halving the size of BP’s leadership team under his plan to reshape the company’s structure.

Shortly after taking office in February, the 49-year-old CEO said he was creating 11 divisions to “reinvent” BP and dismantle the traditiona­l structure dominated by its oil and gas production business and its refining, marketing and trading division.

Chevron Corp, the second-largest US oil producer, last month said that it would cut between 10% to 15% of its global workforce as part of an ongoing restructur­ing.

Royal Dutch Shell, meanwhile, has initiated a voluntary redundancy program.

 ?? (Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters) ?? THE LOGO OF BP is seen at a gas station in Kloten, Switzerlan­d.
(Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters) THE LOGO OF BP is seen at a gas station in Kloten, Switzerlan­d.

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