Husky Energy confirms 370 job cuts as it trims 2020-21 spending by $500 million.
About 370 jobs have been cut at Husky Energy Inc. this year with most of the reductions coming in a major round of layoffs in October, CEO Rob Peabody revealed as he discussed the company’s plans for 2020 and 2021.
The Calgary-based company had previously refused to say how many workers were affected by job cuts designed to better align its workforce with lower capital spending plans going forward.
“What we’re seeing is that reductions will generate forward savings of about $70 million… per year,” Peabody said.
In a regulatory filing earlier this year, Husky said it had 5,157 permanent employees at the end of 2018, a figure little changed from those at the end of 2016 and 2017.
Capital spending for 2020 and 2021 is being cut by $500 million compared with guidance released last spring due to what Husky called changing market conditions.
The budget for 2020 is to fall by about $100 million to between $3.2 billion and $3.4 billion, while the following year it will drop by an additional $400 million.
The savings next year will mainly come from lower spending on cold flow heavy oil projects in Western Canada but production will increase by about four per cent thanks to the startup of two thermal heavy oil projects near Lloydminster, Sask., that use steam to aid flow from wells.
Average upstream production is expected to be in the range of 295,000 to 310,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day for 2020. That includes about 5,000 barrels of oil per day in the first half of the year expected to be interrupted by the Alberta government’s oil curtailment program and planned maintenance activities, Husky said.
Capital spending for 2020 will focus on the thermal projects, its Liuhua 29-1 offshore natural gas project in China and construction of the West White Rose Project in the Atlantic region, Husky said. Production is expected to rise about 10% in 2021 as new projects arrive.
Husky said it expects to spend about $500 million next year related to the ongoing rebuild of its Superior Refinery in Wisconsin, which was partly destroyed by a fire in April 2018.
Peabody said about $150 million of the estimated total $750 million cost of the Superior rebuilding project will go to enhanced safety and throughput measures that will not be covered by insurance, but the remainder is covered and is therefore not included in the capital budget.
Husky, which is controlled by Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-Shing, is basing its capital plan on an oil price of $55 per barrel of West Texas Intermediate for 2020 and $60 in 2021. Its shares have fallen by more than 42% in the past 12 months.