Live Commodities
Live Commodities
Symbol (CFDs)
Month
Last
Prev.
High
Low
Chg.
Chg. %
Time
Feb 25
72.41
73.66
74.28
71.68
-1.21
-1.64%
13:44:32 | Energy
Jan 25
68.64
69.90
70.52
68.57
-1.30
-1.86%
13:44:30 | Energy
Jan 25
3.054
3.053
3.082
2.977
+0.012
+0.39%
13:44:35 | Energy

TIPRO NEWS RELEASES AND STATEMENTS

TEXAS UPSTREAM EMPLOYMENT TRENDS INDICATE A SHORTAGE OF AVAILABLE TALENT

As reported by TIPRO earlier this month, employment growth for the Texas upstream sector stalled in the fourth quarter of 2018 following many months of consecutive growth. A variety of factors contributed to the slowdown in hiring, including takeaway capacity constraints in West Texas, lower crude oil prices, rising material costs resulting from tariffs, as well as an ongoing shortage of available talent.

The following data will illustrate some of the employment trends in the upstream oil and natural gas sector in Q4 based on job postings, which were collected from various sources and processed or enriched to provide information such as standardized occupation, skills, and geography. This report also uses state data from the Texas Workforce Commission. Individual company data was intentionally excluded.

“TIPRO is pleased to provide unique analysis on many economic factors that impact the oil and natural gas industry and our state,” said Ed Longanecker, President of TIPRO. “This data helps to quantity and reinforce the importance of oil and natural gas development and support ongoing workforce initiatives for our industry,” added Longanecker.

In total, there were 49,929 job postings for the Texas upstream sector between September 2018 to December 2018, of which 7,878 were unique. These numbers provide a Posting Intensity of 6-to-1, meaning that for every 6 postings there is 1 unique job posting. This is higher than the Posting Intensity for all other occupations and companies in the state (5-to-1), indicating that Texas upstream jobs have been more difficult to fill due to a variety of potential factors, including a shortage of available workers. Oil and gas jobs in Texas pay on average 132 percent more than the average private sector job in the state.

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