Lethbridge Herald

Suncor to cut 1,500 jobs by end of year

- Amanda Stephenson

Suncor Energy Inc. will cut 1,500 jobs by the end of the year, as new CEO Rich Kruger forges ahead with his mandate to reduce costs and improve the company’s lagging financial performanc­e.

Employees were given the news Thursday afternoon, in a companywid­e email from Kruger, Suncor spokeswoma­n Sneh Seetal said.

She confirmed the job reductions are new, and not part of the company’s previously announced plan to reduce the size of its contractor workforce by 20 per cent in an effort to improve safety and performanc­e at its oilsands sites.

“As a company we needed to make changes that will strengthen our company for the future, and that includes our overall cost structure,” Seetal said by phone, adding the 1,500 job losses will be spread across the organizati­on and will affect both employees and contractor­s.

The reductions amount to about nine per cent of the 16,558 employees that Calgary-based Suncor had at the end of 2022, according to the company’s annual informatio­n form. However, that tally does not include contractor­s.

Suncor has been under pressure from shareholde­rs — including activist investor Elliott Investment Management — to improve its financial and share price performanc­e, which has lagged its peers.

The company has also been under fire for a recent spate of operationa­l issues and workplace safety incidents, including a string of deaths.

Earlier this spring, Kruger, the former CEO of Imperial Oil Ltd., was enticed out of retirement to take the reins of Suncor and try to turn around the oilsands giant.

In an interview with The Canadian Press last month, Kruger declined to say whether that would involve layoffs or not. But he said he would “look hard and long at the work people do” to ensure that everything that is being done at the company adds value to the bottom line.

Seetal declined to say whether the bulk of the layoffs would take place at head office or in the field. Suncor employs people across the country, in the U.S. and internatio­nally, with its corporate head office located in Calgary.

But she echoed Kruger’s theme of needing to ensure people are doing the work that provides the most value to the organizati­on.

“Work that doesn’t necessaril­y support regular day-to-day maintenanc­e and operations of assets would be considered (for layoffs), but it’s not necessaril­y solely office workers,” she said.

Seetal said Suncor is committed to treating its employees with dignity and respect throughout what will inevitably be a difficult process.

She also emphasized the company will not make any cuts that could affect worker safety.

In the first quarter of 2023, Suncor earned a $2.05-billion profit. On an adjusted basis, Suncor’s reported first-quarter profit was $1.81 billion, a 34 per cent decrease year-over-year.

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