×
British Petroleum cuts 6,200 jobs as AI drives slick $5B cost reduction plan
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

BP announced it will eliminate an additional 1,500 jobs and 1,200 contractor roles by the end of 2025, bringing total expected job losses to 6,200—approximately 15% of its office-based workforce. The expanded cuts, up from 4,700 announced earlier this year, are part of the oil giant’s intensified cost-saving drive that increasingly relies on artificial intelligence to improve operational efficiency and reduce expenses.

The big picture: BP is accelerating its workforce reduction amid mounting shareholder pressure and weaker oil prices, with CEO Murray Auchincloss emphasizing that AI technology is playing a central role in the company’s overhaul strategy.

Key details: The job cuts represent a significant escalation from BP’s initial plans, affecting both UK and international operations.

  • BP has already eliminated 3,200 contractor roles since January, with another 1,200 set to be removed by year’s end.
  • The company stated it would “continue to rigorously review the remaining contractor activity across our businesses and functions.”
  • BP employed approximately 14,000 UK workers at the start of 2025, though specific country breakdowns for the cuts weren’t provided.

Financial pressure driving changes: BP faces intensifying demands from investors to boost profitability and streamline operations.

  • Activist investor Elliott Management, an investment firm that pushes companies to make strategic changes, recently acquired a 5% stake in the company.
  • Half-year profits tumbled 32% to $3.73 billion due to weaker oil prices, though Q2 results of $2.35 billion beat analyst expectations.
  • The company is working toward a $5 billion cost reduction target by 2027 and plans to offload $20 billion in assets.

AI’s expanding role: Chief Executive Murray Auchincloss highlighted artificial intelligence as a key component of BP’s transformation strategy.

  • “Technology is helping improve capital productivity and drive cost reductions across the portfolio,” Auchincloss told analysts and investors.
  • The AI implementation is part of BP’s broader efficiency drive that has already stripped $900 million in costs during the first half of 2025.

What they’re saying: BP leadership emphasized the company’s commitment to delivering better shareholder returns.

  • “BP can and will do better for its investors,” Auchincloss stated.
  • “We are two quarters into a 12-quarter plan and are laser-focused on delivery of our four key targets—and while we should be encouraged by our early progress, we know there’s much more to do.”

Looking ahead: BP plans further strategic changes under incoming chairman Albert Manifold, who joins September 1st.

  • Auchincloss and Manifold have agreed to conduct a “thorough review” of BP’s business portfolio to maximize shareholder value.
  • The company announced a $750 million share buyback program and increased its quarterly dividend by 4%.
  • Additional job cuts remain possible as executives continue their comprehensive efficiency review.
BP announces further staff cuts amid new AI policy

Recent News

AMD beats revenue but stock drops 3% on $800M China export impact

Strong gaming and CPU sales helped offset the AI chip regulatory headwinds.

Perplexity pushes back, calls Cloudflare’s AI crawler claims “embarrassing errors”

Perplexity calls Cloudflare's technical analysis "embarrassing errors" in escalating data scraping dispute.