雪佛龙寻求集中运营作为 30 亿美元成本削减战略的一部分

Kevin Crowley 和 Nathan Risser,彭博社 ,2025 年 7 月 9 日

(彭博社)——雪佛龙公司正在减少地方和区域业务部门,转而采用更加集中的模式,以提高绩效,到 2026 年削减高达 30 亿美元的成本。 

副董事长马克·尼尔森周二接受彭博社采访时表示,一个海上部门将负责运营美国墨西哥湾、尼日利亚、安哥拉和东地中海的资产,同时德克萨斯州、科罗拉多州和阿根廷的页岩资产也将集中到一起。 

马尼拉和布宜诺斯艾利斯的服务中心将承担过去在多个国家进行的财务、人力资源和信息技术工作。此外,还计划在休斯顿和印度班加罗尔设立集中工程中心。 

“我们正在努力简化我们的结构,减少一些层级,以便我们能够更快地执行,”尼尔森说,“无论最佳实践位于哪个大陆,它都会在整个系统中得到确定和应用。”

过去几年,低油价和化石燃料前景的不确定性导致投资者要求全球最大的能源公司提供更多现金回报,迫使高管们专注于削减成本,以筹集股息和股票回购资金。即便如此,尽管美国已成为全球最大的石油生产国和天然气出口国,能源股目前在标准普尔500指数中的权重仅为3.1%,不到十年前的一半。 

截至周三午盘交易,雪佛龙今年股价已上涨 5.8%,涨幅领先于标准普尔 500 能源指数 3.1% 和大盘。 

尼尔森表示:“如果我们要继续获胜并成为市场上的投资选择,我们就必须始终提高效率并寻找新的、更好的工作方式。” 

这些调整涵盖了雪佛龙的生产和炼油部门,也是该公司今年2月宣布的一项计划的一部分。该计划计划到明年年底,将其全球员工数量削减多达20%,即9000人。节省下来的20亿至30亿美元的结构性成本足以支付雪佛龙的季度股息。上个月,彭博新闻报道了雪佛龙交易部门的几项重大调整,其中包括提升部分交易员,并向其他交易员提供离职补偿。 

“这些对我们来说都是艰难的决定,”尼尔森说,“我们不会掉以轻心。”他拒绝评论由于亚洲和拉丁美洲全球服务中心的增长是否会导致美国员工数量减少。 

埃克森美孚公司和壳牌公司已经或正在进行类似的公司重组,并将部分职能转移到成本较低的地区。 

直到今年,雪佛龙一直实行分散的全球运营,由实力雄厚的国家经理领导大型部门,能够适应当地的商业环境。但近年来,随着收购美国PDC能源公司和Noble能源公司,以及完成哈萨克斯坦田吉兹油田扩建等重大项目,该公司发生了重大变化。尼尔森表示,雪佛龙现在希望加快执行速度,并在保持其“本地优势”的同时,运用更多技术。 

尼尔森表示,雪佛龙计划将上游部门的业务单元数量从几年前的18到20个精简到3到5个。他补充说,简化的模式将优化全球而非区域层面的钻机调度,并使在一个作业区开发的创新能够快速推广到其他作业区,而无需经过层层管理。

他说道:“当你将工作标准化和集中化时,你就会有更大的机会应用技术。” 

人工智能已经对雪佛龙的下游业务产生了影响。在其位于加州的埃尔塞贡多炼油厂,员工们正在使用人工智能运行数学模型,以确定最佳的石油产品组合,从而实现收益最大化。 

“运行它不需要一天的时间,”尼尔森说。“只需几秒钟就可以运行你的线性程序来确定生产什么产品最好,在哪里销售最好。”

原文链接/WorldOil

Chevron looks to centralize operations as part of $3 billion cost-reduction strategy

Kevin Crowley and Nathan Risser, Bloomberg July 09, 2025

(Bloomberg) – Chevron Corp. is reducing local and regional business units in favor of a more centralized model to improve performance and cut as much as $3 billion of costs by 2026. 

A single offshore division will operate assets in the U.S. Gulf, Nigeria, Angola and Eastern Mediterranean while shale assets in Texas, Colorado and Argentina will also be brought under one roof, Vice Chairman Mark Nelson said in an interview with Bloomberg Tuesday. 

Service centers in Manila and Buenos Aires are set to take on finance, human resources and information technology work that used to be done in multiple countries. Centralized engineering hubs are planned for Houston and Bengaluru, India. 

“We’re working so hard to simplify our structure, take some layers out so that we can execute faster,” Nelson said. “Best practices are decided upon and applied across the system regardless of what continent they happen to sit on.”

Low oil prices and an uncertain outlook for fossil fuels have led investors to demand more cash returns from the world’s largest energy companies over the past few years, forcing executives to focus on reducing costs to help fund dividends and share buybacks. Even so, energy stocks now make up just 3.1% of the S&P 500 Index, less than half the weighting a decade ago, despite the US becoming the world’s largest producer of oil and exporter of natural gas. 

Chevron has climbed 5.8% this year as of Wednesday midday trading, ahead of the S&P 500 Energy Index’s 3.1% increase and the wider market. 

“If we’re going to continue to win and be an investment choice in the market, we have to just always be more effective and look for new ways and better ways to work,” Nelson said. 

The changes, which include the oil major’s production and refining divisions, are part of a plan the oil giant announced in February to reduce its global workforce by as much as 20%, or 9,000 employees, by the end of next year. Structural cost savings between $2 billion and $3 billion could be enough to pay one of Chevron’s quarterly dividends. Last month, Bloomberg News reported on several major changes at Chevron’s trading division, which included promoting some traders and offering severance to others. 

“These are hard decisions for us to make,” Nelson said. “We don’t take them lightly.” He declined to comment on whether the number of U.S. employees would decrease as a result of the growth of global service centers in Asia and Latin America. 

Exxon Mobil Corp. and Shell Plc have or are undergoing similar corporate restructuring and have moved some functions to lower-cost regions. 

Until this year, Chevron ran decentralized global operations with powerful country managers leading large divisions with the ability to adapt to local business conditions. But the company has changed significantly in recent years with the acquisitions of PDC Energy Inc. and Noble Energy Inc. in the U.S. and the completion of major projects such as the expansion of the Tengiz oil field in Kazakhstan. Chevron now wants to speed up execution and use more technology while keeping its “local strength,” Nelson said. 

Chevron plans to reduce the number of business units in the upstream division to between three and five from about 18 to 20 a few years ago, according to Nelson. The simplified model will optimize drill rig schedules globally rather than regionally and will enable innovations developed in one operations to be rolled out to others quickly, without having to go through layers of management, he added.

“When you standardize and centralize work, it gives you greater opportunity to apply technology,” he said. 

Artificial intelligence is already having an impact on Chevron’s downstream operations. At its El Segundo refinery in California, employees are using AI to run mathematical models that determine the optimal mix of petroleum products to maximize revenue. 

“It doesn’t take a day to run it,” Nelson said. “It takes seconds to run your linear program to figure out what’s the best product to make, where’s the best place to sell it.”