Houston Chronicle

Shell extends job cuts as CEO seeks to trim costs

- By Kevin Crowley

Shell has begun cutting jobs beyond previously announced reductions in its low-carbon division as Chief Executive Officer Wael Sawan seeks to trim costs and be more competitiv­e with U.S. rivals, people familiar with the matter said.

Roles are being eliminated on a division-by-division basis, with those affected offered options including redundancy packages or applying for jobs elsewhere in the company, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing non-public informatio­n. Shell declined to comment on the number of jobs involved. The company laid out a plan to investors in June to reduce “structural costs” by as much as $3 billion by the end of 2025.

“Achieving those reductions will require portfolio high grading, new efficienci­es and a leaner overall organizati­on,” Shell said in an email Thursday. “While no formal targets exist, we will continuous­ly look to right-size the activities that deliver the most value.”

Sawan pledged to be “ruthless” in improving Shell’s performanc­e after taking the CEO job earlier this year. The former divisional natural gas chief is making a concerted effort to close the stock’s valuation gap with U.S. rivals Exxon Mobil and Chevron by selling assets and reducing low-return investment­s, including some in clean energy.

Shell employed about 93,000 globally on a full and part-time basis at the end of 2022, more than double that of Chevron, despite the U.S. company having a market value 34% higher. In October, Shell said 200 positions in its Low Carbon Solutions unit would be cut in 2024, about 15% of the total.

Big Oil executives are cautious about the future despite reaping record 2022 profits in the wake of the worldwide disruption­s triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Uncertaint­y over longterm fossil-fuel consumptio­n and investor demands for dividends and stock buybacks are prompting Western oil explorers to be more discipline­d with spending.

Chevron, which agreed to buy Hess Corp. in October, recently instructed staff to “do better” in 2024 after failing to deliver on some key performanc­e metrics. Exxon has reduced headcount 17% since 2019 and earlier this month announced a plan to save $6 billion in structural costs by 2027.

 ?? Kirsty Wiggleswor­th/Associated Press ?? Shell CEO Wael Sawan said the company is seeking to trim costs and be more competitiv­e with U.S. rivals in 2024.
Kirsty Wiggleswor­th/Associated Press Shell CEO Wael Sawan said the company is seeking to trim costs and be more competitiv­e with U.S. rivals in 2024.

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