Energy Firms Halt Return-to-Work Initiatives as Virus Cases Soar
HOUSTON (Reuters) — U.S. energy companies abruptly paused returning staff to their Houston offices as COVID-19 cases soared and top hospitals warned they could soon run out of beds for the most severely ill patients.
A record number of new illnesses in Texas this week spurred local officials to impose restrictions as new cases topped 5,000 on two days in a row. Intensive care unit (ICU) beds were 97% full at Houston's Texas Medical Center, which said it may soon move to surge ICU capacity assignments, officials said.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has led a phased reopening of shops, bars and amusement parks from May 1, and businesses have rolled out their own office restarts. But on Wednesday, he warned of a "massive outbreak" and urged people to stay at home.
Many energy firms qualify as essential and therefore are free to staff normally, but the surge in illness and hospitalizations has large employers delaying or halting openings.
Midcoast Energy, a natural gas pipeline company, reopened on June 1 then sent Houston employees home three weeks later after two tested positive for the virus, according to a person familiar with the matter. President Robert Bond did not reply to requests for comment.
Halliburton Co, the second-largest U.S. oilfield service company by revenue, delayed for two weeks a second-phase of its return-to-work plan, a spokeswoman said.
Chevron also has delayed its reopening plans for further evaluation, said spokesman Sean Comey. About 5% of its Houston office staff and about 2% of its San Ramon, California, workforce are in their offices now, he said.
Exxon Mobil, Phillips 66 and ConocoPhillips returned some white-collar workers to their campuses in May or this month. Exxon will remain below 50% capacity at its Houston-area facility, a spokesman said. Conoco is prepared to change its return-to-office plan if needed, a spokesman said.
Phillips 66 said the vast majority of its staff had returned and would remain working from their offices.
"We are a critical infrastructure industry and have an ongoing obligation to continue operating," spokesman Joe Gannon said, noting that the company follows Centers for Disease Control and government advisories.
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