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发表于 10-3-2015 10:47 PM
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当然要维持,不维持的话,你的销量就会被对手蚕食。
因为石油不是再生能源,所以价钱不可能长期低迷。
如果OPEC减产,那么其它非OPEC成员的产油国机会增加产量,以便增加市场的股份。
等油价上涨的时候,就可以开始赚钱而且也能补回之前的损失。
这就是为什么OPEC怎样也不减产的原因。
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发表于 12-5-2015 10:55 PM
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发表于 14-5-2015 01:33 PM
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发表于 15-5-2015 02:19 PM
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发表于 15-5-2015 03:32 PM
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发表于 21-5-2015 09:54 AM
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因为shale gas的开发能瞬间的推高/拉底 production,操从market price。
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发表于 21-5-2015 10:40 AM
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发表于 29-5-2015 10:05 AM
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不是单单开采gas罢了。oil也是有开采的。不然zomok人家一直说shale revolution?google 多一点啦,别钻牛角尖和玩字眼。
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发表于 2-8-2015 12:50 PM
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Technip Plans 6,000 Layoffs as Part of Restructuring Efforts
Paris-based engineering company Technip S.A. is the latest oil and gas company to announce layoffs as a way to combat a “challenging environment in oil and gas.” As part of its restructuring plan, Technip will lay off 6,000 of its 38,000 employees from its global workforce. The cuts will be implemented over the next 18 months, a Technip spokesperson told Rigzone.
The layoffs come as part of the company’s decision to “accelerate its cost reduction and efficiency efforts worldwide,” according to a statement released by the company. The restructuring plan is expected to save the company over $918 million – almost $775 million will be delivered in 2016 and the remainder in 2017.
A significant part of the restructuring plan addresses the onshore/offshore segment’s “unsatisfactory performance,” including reducing the company’s presence in some onshore/offshore markets where profitable business is unlikely. This is expected to take place in Europe, Asia and Brazil. The company will reinforce investment in key geographic and technological areas, such as FLNG (floating liquefied natural gas). In the subsea sector, Technip will further reduce its fleet, with plans to reduce two more vessels in addition to the two vessel reductions previously planned. This will bring the total number of vessels to 23.
Technip chairman and CEO Thierry Pilenko said in a release that “the slowdown in the oil and gas industry is prolonged and harsh” and that the restructuring “will have tough consequences for employees across the Group.”
Technip joins a host of other companies who have implemented workforce reductions (a total of more than 150,000 jobs lost globally) and restructuring plans as a means of dealing with the volatility of global oil prices. |
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发表于 2-8-2015 12:58 PM
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Shell to Cut 6,500 Jobs as Profit Drops
LONDON— Royal Dutch Shell PLC announced plans to slash 6,500 jobs Thursday amid a slump in oil prices that has sent a wave of job cuts rippling through the industry.
Shell’s job reductions came as Chevron Corp. on Wednesday said it would cut 1,500 jobs, while U.K. utility Centrica PLC on Thursday said it would slash 6,000 positions and work to shrink its oil-and-gas production division. Even deeper cuts have emerged this week at oil services firms, which big energy companies are squeezing for savings; Saipem SpA of Italy, for instance, said it would slash 8,800 jobs in the next two years.
The moves demonstrate how energy companies are moving to slash further to cope with a sustained oil price collapse that they now see lasting for a longer time. Shell, BP PLC, France’s Total SA and Eni SpA of Italy have all outlined plans in their second quarter results to deepen spending cuts that began earlier this year when oil prices reached lows below $50 a barrel, down from highs of $114 a barrel last year.
Shell’s job cuts were announced along with second-quarter earnings that saw its profit fall by 33% from the same period last year, to $3.4 billion compared with $5.1 billion on a current cost of supplies basis—a measure similar to the net income reported in the U.S. As with its peers, Shell’s exploration and production, or upstream business, suffered worst, tumbling to $774 million, down nearly 80% from a year earlier. Shell’s oil production fell 11% to 2.7 million barrels of oil equivalent as the company undertook maintenance at several fields and continued a $20 billion divestment program due to complete at the end of the year.
Shell has seemed more bullish, at least in its rhetoric, on the future of the oil price than peers such as BP. The company sounded a somewhat more cautious note on Thursday, saying in a news release that it was planning for an “oil price downturn [that] could last for several years.”
The planned job cuts for the year are equivalent to around 7% of Shell’s total workforce and will include cuts already announced in the North Sea and Canada. Elsewhere, the company has reduced capital spending and operating costs, sanctioning only two new projects this year and reducing spending on back office activities.
“These are sustainable cost reduction programs. These are not just slash and burn,” Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry told reporters, adding that there is more to come.
Investors seemed to react well to the cost-reduction plans. Shell’s share price rose more than 4% in London following the announcement.
Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint said the spending cuts address “a key investor concern i.e. that Shell’s heads are in the sand and they aren’t reacting to the macro. We can firmly say today they were all along and the data is now evident.”
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发表于 2-8-2015 01:04 PM
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Shell to Cut 6,500 Jobs as Profit Drops
LONDON— Royal Dutch Shell PLC announced plans to slash 6,500 jobs Thursday amid a slump in oil prices that has sent a wave of job cuts rippling through the industry.
Shell’s job reductions came as Chevron Corp. on Wednesday said it would cut 1,500 jobs, while U.K. utility Centrica PLC on Thursday said it would slash 6,000 positions and work to shrink its oil-and-gas production division. Even deeper cuts have emerged this week at oil services firms, which big energy companies are squeezing for savings; Saipem SpA of Italy, for instance, said it would slash 8,800 jobs in the next two years.
The moves demonstrate how energy companies are moving to slash further to cope with a sustained oil price collapse that they now see lasting for a longer time. Shell, BP PLC, France’s Total SA and Eni SpA of Italy have all outlined plans in their second quarter results to deepen spending cuts that began earlier this year when oil prices reached lows below $50 a barrel, down from highs of $114 a barrel last year.
Shell’s job cuts were announced along with second-quarter earnings that saw its profit fall by 33% from the same period last year, to $3.4 billion compared with $5.1 billion on a current cost of supplies basis—a measure similar to the net income reported in the U.S. As with its peers, Shell’s exploration and production, or upstream business, suffered worst, tumbling to $774 million, down nearly 80% from a year earlier. Shell’s oil production fell 11% to 2.7 million barrels of oil equivalent as the company undertook maintenance at several fields and continued a $20 billion divestment program due to complete at the end of the year.
Shell has seemed more bullish, at least in its rhetoric, on the future of the oil price than peers such as BP. The company sounded a somewhat more cautious note on Thursday, saying in a news release that it was planning for an “oil price downturn [that] could last for several years.”
The planned job cuts for the year are equivalent to around 7% of Shell’s total workforce and will include cuts already announced in the North Sea and Canada. Elsewhere, the company has reduced capital spending and operating costs, sanctioning only two new projects this year and reducing spending on back office activities.
“These are sustainable cost reduction programs. These are not just slash and burn,” Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry told reporters, adding that there is more to come.
Investors seemed to react well to the cost-reduction plans. Shell’s share price rose more than 4% in London following the announcement.
Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint said the spending cuts address “a key investor concern i.e. that Shell’s heads are in the sand and they aren’t reacting to the macro. We can firmly say today they were all along and the data is now evident.”
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发表于 2-8-2015 01:04 PM
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Shell to Cut 6,500 Jobs as Profit Drops
LONDON— Royal Dutch Shell PLC announced plans to slash 6,500 jobs Thursday amid a slump in oil prices that has sent a wave of job cuts rippling through the industry.
Shell’s job reductions came as Chevron Corp. on Wednesday said it would cut 1,500 jobs, while U.K. utility Centrica PLC on Thursday said it would slash 6,000 positions and work to shrink its oil-and-gas production division. Even deeper cuts have emerged this week at oil services firms, which big energy companies are squeezing for savings; Saipem SpA of Italy, for instance, said it would slash 8,800 jobs in the next two years.
The moves demonstrate how energy companies are moving to slash further to cope with a sustained oil price collapse that they now see lasting for a longer time. Shell, BP PLC, France’s Total SA and Eni SpA of Italy have all outlined plans in their second quarter results to deepen spending cuts that began earlier this year when oil prices reached lows below $50 a barrel, down from highs of $114 a barrel last year.
Shell’s job cuts were announced along with second-quarter earnings that saw its profit fall by 33% from the same period last year, to $3.4 billion compared with $5.1 billion on a current cost of supplies basis—a measure similar to the net income reported in the U.S. As with its peers, Shell’s exploration and production, or upstream business, suffered worst, tumbling to $774 million, down nearly 80% from a year earlier. Shell’s oil production fell 11% to 2.7 million barrels of oil equivalent as the company undertook maintenance at several fields and continued a $20 billion divestment program due to complete at the end of the year.
Shell has seemed more bullish, at least in its rhetoric, on the future of the oil price than peers such as BP. The company sounded a somewhat more cautious note on Thursday, saying in a news release that it was planning for an “oil price downturn [that] could last for several years.”
The planned job cuts for the year are equivalent to around 7% of Shell’s total workforce and will include cuts already announced in the North Sea and Canada. Elsewhere, the company has reduced capital spending and operating costs, sanctioning only two new projects this year and reducing spending on back office activities.
“These are sustainable cost reduction programs. These are not just slash and burn,” Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry told reporters, adding that there is more to come.
Investors seemed to react well to the cost-reduction plans. Shell’s share price rose more than 4% in London following the announcement.
Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint said the spending cuts address “a key investor concern i.e. that Shell’s heads are in the sand and they aren’t reacting to the macro. We can firmly say today they were all along and the data is now evident.”
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发表于 2-8-2015 01:05 PM
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Shell to Cut 6,500 Jobs as Profit Drops
LONDON— Royal Dutch Shell PLC announced plans to slash 6,500 jobs Thursday amid a slump in oil prices that has sent a wave of job cuts rippling through the industry.
Shell’s job reductions came as Chevron Corp. on Wednesday said it would cut 1,500 jobs, while U.K. utility Centrica PLC on Thursday said it would slash 6,000 positions and work to shrink its oil-and-gas production division. Even deeper cuts have emerged this week at oil services firms, which big energy companies are squeezing for savings; Saipem SpA of Italy, for instance, said it would slash 8,800 jobs in the next two years.
The moves demonstrate how energy companies are moving to slash further to cope with a sustained oil price collapse that they now see lasting for a longer time. Shell, BP PLC, France’s Total SA and Eni SpA of Italy have all outlined plans in their second quarter results to deepen spending cuts that began earlier this year when oil prices reached lows below $50 a barrel, down from highs of $114 a barrel last year.
Shell’s job cuts were announced along with second-quarter earnings that saw its profit fall by 33% from the same period last year, to $3.4 billion compared with $5.1 billion on a current cost of supplies basis—a measure similar to the net income reported in the U.S. As with its peers, Shell’s exploration and production, or upstream business, suffered worst, tumbling to $774 million, down nearly 80% from a year earlier. Shell’s oil production fell 11% to 2.7 million barrels of oil equivalent as the company undertook maintenance at several fields and continued a $20 billion divestment program due to complete at the end of the year.
Shell has seemed more bullish, at least in its rhetoric, on the future of the oil price than peers such as BP. The company sounded a somewhat more cautious note on Thursday, saying in a news release that it was planning for an “oil price downturn [that] could last for several years.”
The planned job cuts for the year are equivalent to around 7% of Shell’s total workforce and will include cuts already announced in the North Sea and Canada. Elsewhere, the company has reduced capital spending and operating costs, sanctioning only two new projects this year and reducing spending on back office activities.
“These are sustainable cost reduction programs. These are not just slash and burn,” Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry told reporters, adding that there is more to come.
Investors seemed to react well to the cost-reduction plans. Shell’s share price rose more than 4% in London following the announcement.
Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint said the spending cuts address “a key investor concern i.e. that Shell’s heads are in the sand and they aren’t reacting to the macro. We can firmly say today they were all along and the data is now evident.”
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发表于 2-8-2015 01:06 PM
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Shell to Cut 6,500 Jobs as Profit Drops
LONDON— Royal Dutch Shell PLC announced plans to slash 6,500 jobs Thursday amid a slump in oil prices that has sent a wave of job cuts rippling through the industry.
Shell’s job reductions came as Chevron Corp. on Wednesday said it would cut 1,500 jobs, while U.K. utility Centrica PLC on Thursday said it would slash 6,000 positions and work to shrink its oil-and-gas production division. Even deeper cuts have emerged this week at oil services firms, which big energy companies are squeezing for savings; Saipem SpA of Italy, for instance, said it would slash 8,800 jobs in the next two years.
The moves demonstrate how energy companies are moving to slash further to cope with a sustained oil price collapse that they now see lasting for a longer time. Shell, BP PLC, France’s Total SA and Eni SpA of Italy have all outlined plans in their second quarter results to deepen spending cuts that began earlier this year when oil prices reached lows below $50 a barrel, down from highs of $114 a barrel last year.
Shell’s job cuts were announced along with second-quarter earnings that saw its profit fall by 33% from the same period last year, to $3.4 billion compared with $5.1 billion on a current cost of supplies basis—a measure similar to the net income reported in the U.S. As with its peers, Shell’s exploration and production, or upstream business, suffered worst, tumbling to $774 million, down nearly 80% from a year earlier. Shell’s oil production fell 11% to 2.7 million barrels of oil equivalent as the company undertook maintenance at several fields and continued a $20 billion divestment program due to complete at the end of the year.
Shell has seemed more bullish, at least in its rhetoric, on the future of the oil price than peers such as BP. The company sounded a somewhat more cautious note on Thursday, saying in a news release that it was planning for an “oil price downturn [that] could last for several years.”
The planned job cuts for the year are equivalent to around 7% of Shell’s total workforce and will include cuts already announced in the North Sea and Canada. Elsewhere, the company has reduced capital spending and operating costs, sanctioning only two new projects this year and reducing spending on back office activities.
“These are sustainable cost reduction programs. These are not just slash and burn,” Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry told reporters, adding that there is more to come.
Investors seemed to react well to the cost-reduction plans. Shell’s share price rose more than 4% in London following the announcement.
Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint said the spending cuts address “a key investor concern i.e. that Shell’s heads are in the sand and they aren’t reacting to the macro. We can firmly say today they were all along and the data is now evident.”
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发表于 9-8-2015 04:44 AM
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大家好,我目前在offshore support company 担任marine engineer, 现在我的船是hire by petronas, seatime 有4年多了。
想问各位前辈以我现在的职位可以到OnG但任什么呢? 我现在想quit sailing了。 |
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发表于 30-10-2015 08:14 AM
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Hi,bro. any 'lobang"??? any "kencing".hope heard u soon.TQ.
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发表于 16-11-2015 12:52 PM
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到处听到MAIN-CON/CONSULTANT裁员, RETRENCHMENT, ENDUSER STAFF TERMINATED/DISCONTINUED CONTRACT, DEPARTMENT RESTRUCTURE等等。。。 风声鹤泪。。。
跟国家龙头公司FAT的时候还听到今年2014的PROJECT完了过后, 明年也开始裁员, 吓了一跳!
现在整个行业水静鹅飞,这里的大家还好吗? |
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发表于 17-11-2015 09:54 PM
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除非IS被毁灭,不然想oil price起都很难了。
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发表于 11-12-2015 03:48 PM
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已经离开(裁员)oil & gas 五个月了。还在找工。 |
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发表于 11-12-2015 05:44 PM
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今天油价再创新低, 36USD/BARREL。
我听说一些马来同胞早上如常到公司开工, 下午就接到裁员通知, 他的整个部门都关店遣散掉, 事先都毫无征兆。
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