Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksBP Share News (BP.)

Share Price Information for BP (BP.)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 510.40
Bid: 509.40
Ask: 509.50
Change: -5.40 (-1.05%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.02%)
Open: 516.30
High: 516.60
Low: 506.10
Prev. Close: 515.80
BP. Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Job losses in UK's North Sea raise skills and safety concerns

Tue, 16th Jun 2015 10:10

* Companies slash jobs in face of oil price plunge

* Experienced workers retiring early, raising safety fears

* Previous downturns led to skills gaps in the sector

* GRAPHIC-Age distribution: http://link.reuters.com/kan74w

By Claire Milhench

LONDON, June 16 (Reuters) - Cost-cutting in Britain's NorthSea oil and gas sector could lead to more acute skills shortagesin future, industry experts have warned, with some expressingconcerns that safety could be compromised.

A plunge in crude prices over the last 12 months hasprompted oil majors such as Royal Dutch Shell, BP, Chevron and ConocoPhillips to lay offhundreds of workers.

Oil field services groups such as Amec Foster Wheeler, Wood Group and Petrofac are also inconsultation with employees over job cuts.

"We have seen a lot of panicking," said Alastair Cole, adirector at Spencer Ogden, an energy recruitment agency. "We'veseen some very quick decisions made to balance the books in theshort term, and there's going to be a big gap in the future."

A report published in February by Britain's Oil and GasAuthority found that firms had significantly reduced staffinglevels and contractor rates.

"The (cost-reduction) programmes should recognise the risksof potentially losing key skills and expertise required for thefuture. Great care must also be taken to avoid adverse impactson safety, the environment and maintenance programmes," it said.

Many experienced older workers are also opting to hang uptheir wrenches in favour of early retirement, just as ageingplatforms need more specialist care and attention.

"Not only do we have installations that have been out there20 or 30 years, but many of these installations also have asignificant number of people on them who have been there fromthe beginning. So knowledge transfer is an issue," said JohnWishart, president of Lloyd's Register Energy.

It's a huge turnaround from the situation last summer whencompanies were struggling to recruit senior project managers ofthe right calibre, leading to rampant wage inflation.

"My worry is that we could take it too far," said BrianCampbell, a director at PwC. "Then when the oil price goes backup and everyone is scurrying around for the same talent, ratescould go through the roof and we're back to square one."

MIND THE GAP

Similar cut-backs in previous downturns created gaps in theindustry in the mid-career age group of 35-45 year-olds (seegraphic). This led to accelerated promotions, with talent hiredaway by other organisations and some people promoted ahead oftheir competency level, industry participants say.

Cole said he knew of people retiring early because ofworries that in a few years' time, the supervisory levelsoffshore would be filled by less experienced people.

He cited the example of an offshore installation manager whosaid that since the downturn of 2008, people could be promotedup the ranks of an offshore rig in 4-5 years, rather than theminimum of 15 years that it used to take.

"It doesn't mean they're better - it's just a necessity. Hesaid that will become a safety issue and he doesn't want to bethere when something goes wrong," Cole said.

Some industry veterans point out that younger managers haveno direct memory of the 1988 Piper Alpha disaster, in which 167men died after a gas explosion.

That accident occurred against a backdrop of industrycost-cutting adopted after the 1986 oil price plunge - asimilarity that is ringing alarm bells with some.

"The scars and memories of an event like Piper are leavingthe industry," said one engineer with 33 years in the sector."The deaths from Piper were a result of lots and lots of smallbut very bad decisions. Those same decisions are being takentoday, I see it consistently in my work."

As a result of Piper Alpha, offshore safety has beenradically overhauled, reducing fatalities to very low levels,but some fear that as collective memory fades, standards willstart to drop again.

For their part, North Sea operators insist that safetyremains paramount. Commenting on job losses back in March,Shell's upstream vice president for the UK and Ireland, PaulGoodfellow, said changes would be implemented withoutcompromising Shell's commitment to "the safety of our people andthe integrity of our assets".

LOSS OF EXPERIENCE

A December 2014 study by Ernst & Young estimated that around38,000 full-time workers were expected to retire between 2014and 2019, out of a total workforce of 375,000.

But David Gibbons-Wood, director of the Centre forInternational Labour Market Studies at Robert Gordon University,Aberdeen, said that where companies are undertaking redundancyprogrammes, it will accelerate exits.

Thomas Helmer, who worked in the industry for almost 40years as an engineer and manager, and now works for a crisismanagement company, said he was concerned about the loss of "aphenomenal amount of experience in a very short period".

"The key to risk management is knowing what can go wrong,"he said. "If you don't have that knowledge and experience youwill not select and implement the appropriate controls."

He said problems with current safety procedures includedflawed management of corrosion defects, some deluge testingbeing overdue and poor controls over temporary equipment. Headded an increase in bureaucracy over the years had keptsupervisors behind desks rather than walking the floor.

"It is true that the offshore industry has become safer ifyou look back, but that does not mean a major event cannothappen."

(Editing by Tom Pfeiffer and Pravin Char)

More News
6 Feb 2024 12:10

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: BP tops FTSE 100 index on buyback promise

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 was higher at midday Tuesday, despite lingering unease in equity markets on US interest rate worries, while BP led the way among London's large-caps as it announced a buyback plan.

Read more
6 Feb 2024 09:04

TOP NEWS: BP promises buybacks and hikes dividend despite profit fall

(Alliance News) - BP PLC on Tuesday reaffirmed it is sticking to its commitment to share buybacks despite reporting a profit decline amid a fall in oil prices.

Read more
6 Feb 2024 08:53

LONDON MARKET OPEN: BP jumps after unveiling share buyback

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 in London opened higher on Tuesday, with oil major BP at the top of the index, thanks to its new share buyback programme.

Read more
6 Feb 2024 07:47

LONDON BRIEFING: BP promises buyback despite drop in profit

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are called to open higher, ahead of a slew of construction purchasing managers' index readings from the eurozone, the UK and Germany.

Read more
6 Feb 2024 07:02

BP unveils $1.75bn buyback as 2023 profits halve on weaker oil price

(Sharecast News) - Shares in BP surged on Tuesday as the energy giant announced a $1.75bn share buyback despite a slump in annual profits as oil prices fell during 2023 from the spike caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Read more
2 Feb 2024 17:12

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks mixed as US jobs data dashes rate cut hope

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed mixed, after hotter-than-expected US jobs data hit already precarious investor sentiment and all but ensured the Federal Reserve will not be cutting interest rates next month.

Read more
2 Feb 2024 13:14

BP appoints Kate Thomson as its permanent finance chief

(Sharecast News) - BP announced the appointment of Kate Thomson as its new, permanent chief financial officer on Friday, effective immediately.

Read more
2 Feb 2024 12:27

TOP NEWS: BP promotes Kate Thomson as permanent finance chief

(Alliance News) - BP PLC on Friday named Kate Thomson as its permanent chief financial officer, after being in the interim role since September.

Read more
2 Feb 2024 12:09

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Airlines up but oil falls on Middle East talks

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were higher at midday Friday, ahead of the afternoon's US jobs data, as earnings from tech behemoths overnight lifted investor morale.

Read more
2 Feb 2024 08:54

LONDON MARKET OPEN: European stocks lifted on Wall Street's gains

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Friday, closing of a busy week of monetary policy decisions.

Read more
1 Feb 2024 17:03

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks down on hawkish BoE interest rates hold

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed down on Thursday after the Bank of England left interest rates on hold in a split decision that was hawkish on expectations of rate cuts.

Read more
1 Feb 2024 12:22

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: BoE keeps bank rate on hold in split decision

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 was on the up on Thursday afternoon after the Bank of England left interest rates on hold on Thursday, in a split decision.

Read more
1 Feb 2024 10:06

New UK oil and gas exploration licences approved in the North Sea

(Alliance News) - The UK's oil and gas regulator has awarded 24 new exploration licences to 17 separate companies in a move that has been welcomed by a trade body but condemned by climate campaigners.

Read more
1 Feb 2024 08:50

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Shells begins USD3.5 billion buyback; eyes on BoE

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened mixed, ahead of the Bank of England's first interest rate decision of the year.

Read more
30 Jan 2024 15:28

UK earnings, trading statements calendar - next 7 days

Wednesday 31 January 
Aberforth Smaller Companies Trust PLCFull Year Results
abrdn Private Equity Opportunities Trust PLCFull Year Results
Ecora Resources PLCTrading Statement
GSK PLCFull Year Results
ITM Power PLCHalf Year Results
NWF Group PLCHalf Year Results
Thursday 1 February 
Airtel Africa PLCTrading Statement
AG Barr PLCTrading Statement
BT Group PLCTrading Statement
Cranswick PLCTrading Statement
Gem Diamonds LtdTrading Statement
Glencore PLCTrading Statement
JTC PLCTrading Statement
Rank Group PLCHalf Year Results
Shell PLCFull Year Results
TClarke PLCTrading Statement
Friday 2 February 
YouGov PLCTrading Statement
Monday 5 February 
Home REIT PLCTrading Statement
Porvair PLCFull Year Results
Trident Royalties PLCTrading Statement
Vodafone Group PLCTrading Statement
Tuesday 6 February 
Alumasc Group PLCHalf Year Results
BP PLCFull Year Results
Filtronic PLCHalf Year Results
Mattioli Woods PLCHalf Year Results
Renishaw PLCHalf Year Results
Virgin Money UK PLCTrading Statement
  
Comments and questions to newsroom@alliancenews.com
  
A full 21-day events calendar is provided each day with a subscription to Alliance News UK Professional.
  
Copyright 2024 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.