Texas
Related: About this forumLost generation of oil workers leaves few options for next boom
The oil industry is fighting a generation gap.
Already contending with a global price slump, U.S. explorers are also grappling with the demographic hangover of the last great industry downturn in the 1980s, when scores of drillers went out of business. That rout drove a generation away from the business, leaving a shortage of workers in their late 30s to 50s today just as companies try to replace the Baby Boomers who make up much of senior management.
What the industry calls the Great Crew Change -- the looming retirement of thousands of older workers -- has companies trying to plug the gap by training younger employees, recruiting outside the industry and enticing veterans to hang on longer. Its also forced drillers into a delicate balancing act amid the current downturn, as they lay off thousands but try to hold on to hard-to-replace scientists and engineers.
Everybody thats going through the process of downsizing their business right now is faced with this extra complication, said Robert Sullivan, a management consultant for New York-based AlixPartners. Decisions that get made right now on how you right-size the company are going to have a huge impact when the market turns.
Read more: http://www.mrt.com/business/oil/article_def0feb8-4712-11e6-882b-f3c32c24569b.html (Midland Reporter-Telegram)
Nay
(12,051 posts)makes them unavailable later! Who could have known??
Hey, why not just hire everybody as gig workers, like Uber drivers, and tell the employees to just put themselves into suspended animation when they are no longer needed? Then the great American economy could tick along like a clock, and those pesky workers won't need food, families, etc.
yellowdogintexas
(22,280 posts)has been on a long series of Uber assignments in the Oil Field for as long as I have known him.
This is our second boom and bust cycle
Unfortunately this one may take so long that he will be too old to go back out in the field when the market upturns again
Jerry442
(1,265 posts)Unless there's extraordinary evidence, you can safely assume that all stories about major shortages of workers are lies.
TexasBushwhacker
(20,222 posts)It means they either aren't paying enough or the are unwilling to train new workers. Fuck'em.
Paladin
(28,277 posts)The industry has a long history of ditching countless numbers of people, without a second thought of their wellbeing or future staffing needs. I know that from long and bitter experience.