The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Energy job losses soar

More than 4,500 out of work

- BY DAVID MCPHEE

More than 4,500 North Sea job losses have already happened in the wake of the Covid-19 outbreak and oil price rout, it is understood.

The shocking figure was disclosed to Scottish trade unions by skills agency Skills Developmen­t Scotland (SDS).

One trade union boss called the situation “frightenin­g” and revealed he was currently undertakin­g a “relentless” number of redundancy

“Grim impact on UK offshore oil and gas industry”

consultati­ons. A report released by representa­tive body Oil and Gas UK in April warned 30,000 direct and indirect jobs could be cut in the next 12-18 months.

It claimed the North Sea supply chain could be the worst hit by the current state of the industry.

Also in April, the Offshore Co-ordinating Group (OCG), a coalition of trade unions, issued its own report claiming upwards of 3,500 workers could be displaced by September 2020.

The Scottish Government unveiled a £62 million package for the sector’s recovery last week, made available over five years.

Jake Molloy, OCG chairman and regional organiser for the RMT union, warned the job losses were increasing “day by day” as subsea and drilling activity has “dropped off a cliff ”.

He said: “Trade union estimates predicted around 3,500 UK oil jobs would be displaced by September, but SDS told us during the course of a meeting that figure had already been reached and it was more like 4,500 already.

“The Scottish Government’s £62m fund will see a chunk go to an underwater engineerin­g hub.

“Let’s get after it. Let’s not dilly-dally and wait around. We’ve got to get chasing this now.”

He also said more had to be done to prevent decommissi­oning work from going overseas. On Friday, it was announced Shell’s Curlew production vessel, berthed in Dundee for cleaning since mid-2019, would go to a Norwegian yard for scrapping.

OGUK chief executive

Deirdre Michie said: “The coronaviru­s pandemic and low oil and gas prices continue to have a really grim impact on the UK’s offshore oil and gas industry, with our recent report warning up to 30,000 jobs could be lost over the next 12 to 18 months if conditions persist.

“We are working with our members, the OGA and both government­s to do everything that can be done to try to mitigate the drop in activity levels and job losses.

“That’s why we welcomed the Scottish Government’s recent funding announceme­nt and today can confirm that we are in formal discussion­s with the UK Government on a sector deal.”

 ??  ?? HUMAN COST: More than 4,500 jobs have now been lost in the wake of coronaviru­s and the oil price rout, says Skills Developmen­t Scotland
HUMAN COST: More than 4,500 jobs have now been lost in the wake of coronaviru­s and the oil price rout, says Skills Developmen­t Scotland

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