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Shell Canada to reduce oilsands workforce

WATCH: The plummeting price of oil is taking a bite off the province’s bottom line. As Reid Fiest reports, the fate of the Keystone XL pipeline could compound the losses.

EDMONTON – Shell Canada Ltd. says it is reducing its workforce at its Albian Sands oilsands operations near Fort McMurray, Alta.

A company spokesman says the cuts will affect less than 10 per cent of its 3,000-plus workforce at the Muskeg River and Jackpine oilsands mines.

Cameron Yost says the actual number of reductions hasn’t been determined and most of the people who will be affected will be salaried employees.

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He says the cuts are to ensure that Shell’s oilsands business remains competitive and continues to thrive.

Yost says in some cases people will be considered for jobs elsewhere in Shell’s global operations.

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Shell says its Albian Sands mining operations account for 17 per cent of Canada’s total oil production.

“We have taken a decision to adjust our Albian Sands organization to ensure that we have got the right number of people in the right positions,” Yost said in an interview Friday.

“As with any company we continually review all areas of our business to ensure that we remain competitive.”

The federal government approved an expansion of the Jackpine project on Dec. 6, 2013.

Shell’s oilsands crude is upgraded into a more easily refined product at its Scotford upgrader, near Edmonton.

Shell Canada’s European parent company is Royal Dutch Shell PLC.

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