Wintershall Dea announced that it is positioning itself for the future with an adjusted company structure to strengthen its competitiveness, reduce administrative costs, and focus more clearly on its strategic priorities.
“We have adjusted our corporate strategy in line with the changing energy sector and our exit from Russia, and we are now refocusing our organizational structure accordingly,” said Mario Mehren, Wintershall Dea’s CEO.
According to a statement from the company, the future Wintershall Dea Management Board will comprise three members: Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Mario Mehren, Chief Operating Officer (COO) Dawn Summers, and Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Paul Smith.
Hugo Dijkgraaf, Chief Technology Officer (CTO) and Board Member, will leave the company as of 30 November 2023. His areas of responsibility will be transferred to the other Board members. The Management Board had already been reduced in size with the departure of Thilo Wieland,
responsible for Region Russia, Latin America and Transportation, earlier in 2023.
The planned restructuring will also reduce administrative costs. “In total, the company plans to deliver annual savings of around 200 million euros, with nearly half of this figure coming from job reductions,” said the statement.
As part of the restructuring, the company plans to reduce around 500 positions, of which 300 are located in Germany. “We are changing the way we operate and strengthening our international business units. To do this, we have to take the difficult step of reducing our teams in Germany,” said Mario Mehren. The company said the job reductions are to be made in a socially responsible way as much as possible. Precise plans for the job reductions in Germany will now be negotiated with works councils.
Wintershall Dea will make a provision of 225 million euros in Q3 2023 for the implementation of the restructuring plans.
There will also be changes to the company’s international business units. Activities in Algeria, Egypt, Libya and the United Arab Emirates will in future be led under a joint business unit for the MENA region. Local offices in Cairo, Abu Dhabi and Tripoli will be maintained.
In the future, Kassel will be the sole headquarters for Wintershall Dea. The company has a presence in Kassel for almost 70 years. Since the merger of Wintershall and DEA in 2019, the company has operated two headquarters, one in Kassel and one in Hamburg. Now, around 100 positions will be relocated from Hamburg to Kassel, in a responsible way and in negotiations with works councils. The company’s Hamburg office will continue to serve as the office-location for Wintershall Dea’s
business unit Germany.
Wintershall Dea indicated that its plans for “a new organizational structure also reflect the new realities since Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine.”
The company is currently implementing its complete withdrawal from Russia. As a part of this process, Wintershall Dea is legally separating its Russian business. Wintershall Dea’s international E&P business and its carbon management and hydrogen activities are to be separated from all joint ventures with Russian participations. Those include shareholdings in joint ventures in Russia, its shareholding in Wintershall AG in Libya (51 per cent share), in Wintershall Noordzee BV in the Netherlands (50 per cent share) and its shares in Nord Stream AG (15.5 per cent share).
“Our decision is clear: We are leaving Russia. The legal separation of our international business from the Russian joint ventures is a further step in this process,” said Mario Mehren. The legal separation is planned to be completed by mid-2024.