Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Wael Sawan
Shell CEO Wael Sawan attends a panel during the Abu Dhabi International Progressive Energy Congress earlier this month. Photograph: Amr Alfiky/Reuters
Shell CEO Wael Sawan attends a panel during the Abu Dhabi International Progressive Energy Congress earlier this month. Photograph: Amr Alfiky/Reuters

Shell boss set to cut jobs from low-carbon division

This article is more than 5 months old

Wael Sawan ready to axe 200 roles from division as part of plan to grow profits

Shell’s new chief executive is poised to cut hundreds of jobs from the oil giant’s low-carbon division as part a plan to boost the company’s profits.

Wael Sawan plans to shrink the number of staff working on low-carbon solutions by around 200 next year, after vowing to shift Shell’s focus towards high-profit oil projects and expanding its gas business when he became chief executive in January.

Shell managers reportedly told staff in the division last week that they will also consider culling a further 130 roles from the business unit, which in total would represent a 25% cut from the low carbon solutions team.

Some of the employees will be reassigned to other parts of the company, which employs a total of 90,000 people in 70 countries.

The low-carbon team is focused on the transport and heavy industry sectors, but it does not include staff working within Shell’s renewable power business.

The job cuts are expected to target those developing solutions for hydrogen-powered light vehicles. Shell was an early adopter of the technology, which has fallen from favour as the popularity of electric vehicles has grown.

The division also includes carbon capture and storage and nature-based businesses, which will not be affected by the current round of cuts, according to sources cited by Reuters, which first reported the redundancies. The company said it remains committed to investing in “viable low-carbon business models”.

Sawan has promised to grow Shell’s gas business despite warnings from climate experts that new oil and gas projects are not compatible with the global goal of limiting global heating to within 2C of pre-industrialised levels.

The plans provoked outrage from climate campaigners and Shell’s own employees after two members of staff wrote a rare open letter urging Sawan not to scale back investments in renewable energy.

A spokesperson for Shell said the cuts were part of the company’s drive to “create more value with less emissions” by focusing on “performance, discipline, and simplification” across the company.

“We are transforming our low-carbon solutions business to strengthen its delivery on our core low-carbon business areas such as transport and industry. In line with these principles, we are simplifying the business structure and reducing the head count,” the spokesperson added.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Is Shell trying to kill the London stock market?

  • Shell’s former chief fuels fears it could quit London for New York

  • Shell waters down emissions cut pledge despite crucial climate decade

  • Shell to raise dividends again despite 30% fall in annual profits

  • Shell to face human rights claims in UK over chronic oil pollution in Niger delta

  • Shell Energy fined £1.4m for failing to flag end of mobile and broadband contracts

  • Shell angers climate activists with plan for $23bn shareholder payout

  • UK regulator trying to block release of Shell North Sea documents

  • Shell shares hit record high as Israel-Hamas war drives up oil price

  • Shell signals retreat from carbon offsetting

Most viewed

Most viewed