Malaysia's Petronas Plans Job Cuts

Friday, February 7, 2025

Malaysia's state energy firm Petronas will reduce its workforce to ensure its long-term survival amid increasing challenges in the global operating environment, local media reported on Friday, citing the Petronas chief.

"The rationale to do this is to ensure the survival of Petronas in the coming decades. If we don't do it now, there will be no Petronas in 10 years," president and chief executive officer Tengku Muhammad Taufik Tengku Aziz told media, according to outlet The Edge, without saying how many jobs might be affected.

State news agency Bernama carried a similar story from what it said was an editors briefing, quoting the CEO as saying the move was to ensure Petronas can "continuously contribute to nation-building".

Petronas has nearly 50,000 employees, according to its website. Petronas confirmed the media reports in an email response to Reuters, and said the number of affected employees was not mentioned during the briefing.

Muhammad Taufik said the "right-sizing" exercise was not a result of a deal between Petronas and the Sarawak state government on local gas distribution.

Negotiations between Petronas and Sarawak's Petros last year raised concerns over the impact on Petronas, which is a major contributor to federal coffers, and its operations in Sarawak, which holds more than 60% of Malaysia's gas reserves.

Muhammad Taufik said, according to The Edge, that there would be thinner margins and higher technical challenges in oil and gas development projects.

Malaysia expects lower natural gas and crude oil output in 2025 due to the planned shutdowns of some production facilities for maintenance and easing demand in some export markets, according to a government report.

Muhammad Taufik said the composition of production-sharing contracts was expected to change, leading to a reduction in Petronas' share of earnings, adding the lucrative margins enjoyed by the firm will shrink to low double digits in the years ahead, from above 20% currently.

Moving forward, Petronas must not only be a supplier of oil or natural gas but offer more products such as blue ammonia, a clean gas produced from hydrocarbon, he was quoted saying.


(Reuters - Reporting by Danial Azhar and Ashley Tang; Editing by Martin Petty and Louise Heavens)

Categories: People Industry News Activity Asia Jobs Oil and Gas

Related Stories

Petronas Makes New Hydrocarbon Discovery in Southeast Asia

OneSubsea Bags Third PTTEP Subsea Systems Contract in One Year

Sunda Energy Secures Environmental License for Drilling Ops off Timor-Leste

Valeura Lifts Output with Three Producing Wells at Thailand’s Manora Field

Velesto Gets Shell’s Deepwater Job Offshore Malaysia

Qatar LNG Halt Forces Asia to Seek Alternative Supplies

Inpex Eyes Mid-Year Bids for $21B Indonesia LNG Project

MISC, PTSC Extend Ruby II FPSO Operations Offshore Vietnam

Petronas Takes Operatorship of Oman’s Offshore Block 18

Malaysia Offers Nine Exploration Blocks in 2026 Bid Round

Current News

Petronas Makes New Hydrocarbon Discovery in Southeast Asia

PTTEP Picks Everllence Compressors for Thailand’s Offshore CCS Project

IEA Unleashes Record 400M Barrel Oil Stockpile Release Amid Iran War Disruptions

OneSubsea Bags Third PTTEP Subsea Systems Contract in One Year

Iran War Exposes Risks of Fossil Fuel Dependence

Sunda Energy Secures Environmental License for Drilling Ops off Timor-Leste

Oil Drops 7% After Trump Predicts War Could End Soon

Aramco Warns of Severe Oil Market Fallout from Hormuz Blockade

Offshore Tech: Seadrill Adopts igus’ Modular Energy Chains

OSV Market: Asia Pacific Downshifts for the Long Haul

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com