Close X
Monday, October 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

TransCanada Warns Layoffs Coming As Oil Downturn Squeezes Customers

The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2015 12:58 PM
    CALGARY — Employees at TransCanada were informed this week that more job cuts are coming as part of a major overhaul that includes shedding a fifth of senior leadership positions from the pipeline and energy company.
     
    "Falling oil prices and the current environment are having a profound impact on our customers and we must do all we can to drive down costs and pursue our projects more efficiently and strategically," spokesman James Millar said in an emailed statement.
     
    "We are now introducing significant changes that will make us a more nimble organization that will ensure each one of our three business units — natural gas pipelines, liquids pipelines and energy — are able to make the decisions necessary to maintain competitiveness and maximize shareholder value."
     
    TransCanada's growth plan includes $46 billion in commercially secured projects that are set to be complete by the end of the decade.
     
    Millar said about 20 per cent of senior leadership positions are expected to be cut when layoffs and retirements are taken into account.
     
    After that, TransCanada will continue to analyze its organizational structure. It's not clear yet how many of TransCanada's 6,000 employees may ultimately lose their jobs.
     
    TransCanada eliminated 185 positions from its major projects division in June, the first phase of a process that's expected to wrap up in November.
     
    Earlier this week, U.S. presidential contender Hillary Clinton came out against TransCanada's (TSX:TRP) proposed Keystone XL pipeline, a cross-border oilsands conduit that has been stuck in U.S. regulatory limbo for seven years.
     
    Meanwhile, U.S. benchmark crude prices are hovering below US$45 a barrel — about half of what they were a year ago and below what many producers need to turn a profit.
     
    The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers has estimated 35,000 jobs in the oil and gas industry have been shed so far this year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Men Rescued After Fishing Vessel Capsizes In Waters Off Nova Scotia

    Four Men Rescued After Fishing Vessel Capsizes In Waters Off Nova Scotia
    YARMOUTH, N.S. — Four men are back on shore after a fishing vessel capsized off Nova Scotia's southwest coast early Saturday morning.

    Four Men Rescued After Fishing Vessel Capsizes In Waters Off Nova Scotia

    London Man Charged For Impersonating A Police Officer With Fake Cruiser

    London Man Charged For Impersonating A Police Officer With Fake Cruiser
    LONDON, Ont. — A 50-year-old London, Ont., man is facing charges after police say he equipped his vehicle to look like a police cruiser and pulled over numerous drivers.

    London Man Charged For Impersonating A Police Officer With Fake Cruiser

    Montreal Blocks Imam Hamza Chaoui's Project To Open Islamic Community Centre

    Montreal Blocks Imam Hamza Chaoui's Project To Open Islamic Community Centre
    MONTREAL — The Islamic community centre that controversial imam Hamza Chaoui had hoped to open in east Montreal will not see the light of day, local officials said.

    Montreal Blocks Imam Hamza Chaoui's Project To Open Islamic Community Centre

    John Baird in U.S. applauds 'truly historic' rapprochement with Cuba

    John Baird in U.S. applauds 'truly historic' rapprochement with Cuba
    BOSTON — Canada's foreign affairs minister used a trip to the United States to applaud that country's reopening of relations with Cuba.

    John Baird in U.S. applauds 'truly historic' rapprochement with Cuba

    Woman And Child Pulled From Vancouver Island River, Conditions Unknown

    Woman And Child Pulled From Vancouver Island River, Conditions Unknown
    Const. Don Sinclair of the Comox Valley RCMP says police received multiple 911 calls of a woman and a small child floating down the fast-flowing Puntledge River mid-afternoon on Friday.

    Woman And Child Pulled From Vancouver Island River, Conditions Unknown

    Body Of 26-year-old Vancouver Man Finally Identified After Four Decades: Coroner

    Body Of 26-year-old Vancouver Man Finally Identified After Four Decades: Coroner
    Coroner Bill Inkster says the body was recovered in July 1975 and transported to Saint Paul's Hospital for a forensic examination.   

    Body Of 26-year-old Vancouver Man Finally Identified After Four Decades: Coroner