(AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

By CATHY BUSSEWITZ, Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Exxon Mobil is slashing 1,900 jobs from its U.S. workforce, and Chevron plans to cut a quarter of the employees at its recently-acquired Noble Energy as the pandemic saps demand for fuel.

Exxon said Thursday the reductions will be both voluntary and involuntary and will largely come from its management offices in Houston. The Irving, Texas oil giant had about 75,000 employees worldwide at the end of 2019.

The oil industry was already struggling before the pandemic struck, with a weakened global economy decreasing demand for energy and producers flooding the market with cheap fuel. Then prices fell well below what producers need to break even. A barrel of the U.S. benchmark crude was selling for about $35 Thursday, and most producers need at least $50 a barrel to make ends meet. As the pandemic gripped the U.S. economy and demand for fuel plummeted, Exxon announced in March that it would cut expenses by 30%.

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Related news:
Environmental groups sue the U.S. EPA for failing to update and enforce rules for flaring, or burning off excess gases.
(Houston Chronicle)
Federal regulators order the Atlantic Coast Pipeline to provide a plan for winding down the canceled project (Virginia Mercury)

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