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Shell to cut about 9,000 jobs in migration to low-carbon energy

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Shell to cut about 9,000 jobs in migration to low-carbon energy

The Anglo-Dutch company said on Wednesday that it would cut 7,000 to 9,000 positions by the end of 2022, potentially affecting more than 10% of its workforce. The total includes 1,500 people who have left the company to volunteer this year.

Job losses are part of the havoc made to cut costs and simplify the company’s structure as it goes into low carbon emissions. Shell (RDSA) It is expected to deliver annual cost savings of up to 2.5 2.5 billion by 2022.

“We need to become a simpler, more streamlined, more competitive organization that is as agile and capable as it is accountable to customers.” CEO Ben Van Burden said in a statement. “Make no mistake: this is a very difficult process. It is very sad to know that you will end up saying goodbye to so many good people,” he added.

Shell is committed to achieving net zero carbon emissions from its own operations by 2050. The company will still produce little oil and gas by that date, but it will sell “primarily” low-carbon electricity, low-carbon biofuels and hydrogen, Van Burden said Wednesday.

“We have to have a net zero in all our operations, which means big changes in refineries, chemical sites, shoreline and sh fashore production facilities. But it also means we have to change the type of products we sell.” Added.

In the future, the company will use its oil exploration and manufacturing business to generate cash that can be invested in low-carbon products. The department will no longer focus on how many barrels of oil or solid feet of gas it produces.

The shell will also shrink its refining business. “We will keep what we need strategically and integrate the refineries with our chemical business, which we plan to grow,” said Van Bourden.

Some analysts believe that global oil demand will never return to its 2019 record, expecting that the epidemic will permanently change people’s lives and travel patterns – and force consumer companies and governments to address the climate crisis more urgently.

European energy companies have been much more aggressive than US competitors Exxon Mobil (XOM) In the shift of cleaner energy. B.P. (B.P.) Announced in June that it would cut 10,000 jobs or 15% of its employees, as part of its own workload.

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