Qatar Petroleum plans job and cost cuts amid market downturn: sources
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LONDON/DUBAI: Qatar Petroleum, one of the world's biggest energy
companies, plans a new wave of job cuts and spending reductions to cope
with the slump in oil and gas demand which has hit global economies,
two sources familiar with the matter said.
Economic lockdowns brought on by the coronavirus
pandemic look set to cut global energy demand sharply with business
activity stalling across much of the globe as the containment measures
hammer the world economy, cementing economists' views of a deep global
recession.
Qatar Petroleum's (QP) Chief Executive Saad al-Kaabi
told the company's employees in an internal memo of the planned staff
cuts which would be finalised after Eid-al-Fitr religious holiday for
Muslims, which is towards the end of May, the sources said.
"Like
all oil and gas companies QP is looking at reducing expenditure due to
the market downturn which... will be weak for some time," one of the
sources said, adding that QP's planned cuts would not impact its energy
development plans.
Qatar, a tiny but wealthy country is one of the most influential LNG
market players with annual production of 77 million tonnes. It plans to
increase its LNG production to 126 million tonnes a year by 2027.
QP
will postpone the start of production from its new gas facilities until
2025 following a delay in the bidding process, but is not downsizing
the world's largest LNG project, the North Field expansion, Kaabi told
Reuters earlier in April.
The planned job and cost cuts will be
the third wave of restructuring by QP over the past 6 years. In 2015,
the company said it has reduced its staff numbers in a restructuring and
decided to exit all non-core businesses after a plunge in oil and gas
prices increased financial pressures on Qatar.
In 2018, it has also merged state-owned LNG producers Qatargas and RasGas into one company.
Kaabi
told Reuters in 2018 that QP's operating costs would be 4 billion Qatar
riyals ($1.1 billion) a year lower due to its earlier restructuring,
which included cutting as many as 8,000 jobs to create a more
streamlined operation.
Energy World