Big Oil Slashes Jobs and Investments Amid Prolonged Low Crude Prices
Major oil companies implement sweeping layoffs and cutbacks as crude prices fall nearly fifty percent since 2022’s post‑Ukraine peak.
The global oil and gas industry is confronting its most serious contraction since the COVID‑19 downturn, as a sustained fall in crude prices forces the world's largest producers to reduce jobs, curb capital spending, and scale back shareholder payouts.
Executives warn the sector may endure a prolonged period of subdued market conditions.
Western energy giants such as Chevron, BP, ConocoPhillips, and ExxonMobil have spearheaded the restructuring efforts.
Together, they are implementing thousand‑employee layoffs and aiming for tens of billions of dollars in cost savings.
U.S. shale producers, more exposed to price fluctuations, are particularly vulnerable—ConocoPhillips recently announced workforce reductions of up to twenty‑five percent, affecting as many as three thousand two hundred and fifty employees globally.
Analysts describe this as a “flashing red warning light” for the entire industry.
State‑owned energy firms have also followed suit.
Saudi Aramco has sold a ten‑billion‑dollar stake in a major pipeline network to bolster its finances, while Malaysia’s Petronas is slashing five thousand positions.
In the United States, Texas’s upstream sector lost nearly three thousand jobs over just two summer months, highlighting the broader ripple effects.
The price of Brent crude has nearly halved from its post‑2022 peak.
With an anticipated supply glut and a recent OPEC+ decision to boost output, analysts such as Wood Mackenzie forecast that Brent may slide below sixty dollars a barrel and remain at that level for several years.
At such pricing levels, many Western producers struggle to sustain investment plans, maintain dividends, and support share buybacks.
Capital expenditure is on the decline.
Global spending on oil and gas production is projected to fall by four point three percent this year to approximately three hundred forty‑two billion dollars—the first annual reduction since 2020.
In the U.S., the Energy Information Administration warns that production may begin contracting for the first time since twenty twenty‑one.
To adapt, companies are increasingly turning to automation, outsourcing, and artificial intelligence to sharpen efficiency.
Fresh service models include relocating administrative and engineering roles offshore and harnessing digital innovation.
The human impact is palpable.
In Texas’s Permian Basin, Chevron’s ongoing cuts have reached up to eight thousand jobs since February, while BP is expanding its layoffs to a total of over six thousand U.S. office‑based positions by year‑end, part of a broader effort to reduce structural costs by two billion dollars by twenty twenty‑six.
This sweeping contraction across the oil and gas sector reflects a strategic recalibration.
Faced with lower returns, variable demand, and ongoing economic uncertainty, the industry is prioritizing capital discipline and operational efficiency in preparation for a challenging market landscape.