Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Oilpatch Pain Persists As Cenovus To Cut 300 To 400 More Jobs This Year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2015 04:41 PM
    CALGARY — Cenovus Energy says 300 to 400 workers will be let go from its Calgary office by year end as hopes for a quick recovery in oil prices evaporate.
     
    The cuts announced Thursday are on top of 800 positions Cenovus eliminated in February.
     
    "It is always difficult when we have to let good staff members go. We take these decisions very seriously," CEO Brian Ferguson told analysts on a conference call.
     
    "These workforce reductions are directly related to a more focused pace of work in response to the continued low price environment."
     
    A rebound in crude prices to around the US$60 a barrel mark in May and June proved to be short lived. U.S. benchmark crude prices have been below US$50 a barrel in recent weeks, about half of what it fetched a year earlier.
     
    In addition to the head office jobs, the oil producer is also looking to trim its workforce in the field in early 2016.
     
    The reduction is expected to save Cenovus about $100 million annually, on top of the $280 million in cost savings it is already targeting for this year.
     
    Cenovus (TSX:CVE) is also reducing its quarterly dividend by 40 per cent to 16 cents a share.
     
    The company has "stress tested" its financial strength at US$50 oil prices through 2017 and believes it can fund its new dividend and invest in its operations without harming its balance sheet.
     
    The company posted an 80 per cent reduction in net earnings for the second quarter to $126 million from $615 million a year earlier.
     
    Meanwhile, global energy giant Royal Dutch Shell PLC said it expects to have cut 6,500 positions by the end of this year.
     
    Some 700 of those cuts have been in Shell's Canadian heavy oil business, affecting both staff and contractors, said Shell Canada spokesman Cameron Yost. The roughly 300 positions eliminated at Shell's oilsands mining operations earlier this year are included in that figure.
     
    Oilsands giant Suncor Energy (TSX:SU) says it has reduced its headcount by about 1,300 this year.
     
    Late Wednesday, Suncor announced it would be paring a further $400 million from this year's budget to between $5.8 billion and $6.4 billion.
     
    It's the second time this year Suncor has slashed its budget. In January it announced it would reduce its budget by $1 billion to between $6.2 billion and $6.8 billion.
     
    CEO Steve Williams told a conference call there's not much room for more cuts this year.
     
    "This is not slashing and burning. One of the issues with slashing and burning capital budgets is it comes with a price later. So it's been a very measured reduction where we're still getting the maintenance on the plants we want, where we're still getting the growth projects we want fully funded," he said.
     
    "So it's a grinding process of working these costs out through individual contract-type negotiations. So you've seen the majority of it. It's possible you could see even more deflation as the year goes on, but our work program is largely fixed, contracted and in place now."
     
    Suncor netted $729 million during the second quarter, compared to $211 million a year earlier, which it booked impairment charges.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan
    Fire evacuees from La Ronge, one of the largest communities in northern Saskatchewan, are being allowed to go home.

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie
    The Independent Investigations Office says it will be up to Crown counsel to decide if an incident involving a Kamloops, B.C., RCMP officer and a fleeing suspect will result in charges against the Mountie.

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo
    LIKELY, B.C. — It's expected to be at least four days before the only road to several rural properties in the central Interior community of Likely can be reopened to single lane traffic after a significant slide.

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo

    One Home Damaged, 15 Others Isolated By Debris In B.C.'s Cariboo Region

    One Home Damaged, 15 Others Isolated By Debris In B.C.'s Cariboo Region
    Al Richmond of the Cariboo Regional District said early Thursday evening that the slide occurred near the community of Likely, which is about half way between Kamloops and Prince George.

    One Home Damaged, 15 Others Isolated By Debris In B.C.'s Cariboo Region

    Toronto Mayor John Tory's Tweet Using Kanye Song Apparently 'Withheld' Over Copyright

    Toronto Mayor John Tory's Tweet Using Kanye Song Apparently 'Withheld' Over Copyright
    The mayor tweeted the video on Thursday, a day after making headlines by conceding he somehow thought the American rapper was Canadian.

    Toronto Mayor John Tory's Tweet Using Kanye Song Apparently 'Withheld' Over Copyright

    Two Men Arrested In Extortion Case Involving Vancouver Island Family

    Two Men Arrested In Extortion Case Involving Vancouver Island Family
    Nanaimo RCMP Sgt. Sheryl Armstrong says in a news release that police began their investigation Tuesday after a report of an alleged extortion.

    Two Men Arrested In Extortion Case Involving Vancouver Island Family