San Ramon, California – Chevron, one of the top petroleum companies in the world, is getting ready to fire around 600 people from its headquarters in San Ramon, California in a major reorganization effort. As the corporation moves its base to Houston, Texas, this decision is part of a bigger worldwide plan to cut its personnel by 15 to 20 percent by the end of 2026. Following the company’s official notification to California authorities via a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) notice on March 27, the layoffs are scheduled to start on June 1.
Aiming to improve long-term competitiveness against several obstacles, including increasing operational costs and project delays, this cut is an essential component of Chevron’s larger efforts to simplify operations and reduce costs by $3 billion. The business is also seeing a drop in oil and gas reserves as a fundamental driver for these changes.

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Chevron has been thinking about leaving California for some time; the corporation said its intention to progressively relocate its headquarters to Houston over the following five years. The move is seen as a strategic one to place the corporation nearer to a more desirable regulatory and commercial climate as well as to its largest U.S. workforce, which totals around 7,000 people in Texas.
Henry Perea, Chevron’s state government affairs director, said in the WARN notice that the impacted workers will not be abandoned unsupported. To help those affected by the layoffs, the company intends to provide extended medical insurance, access to educational and training resources, and career transition services. Though no particular figures have been verified as of at this point Perea said that more layoffs could be coming in California in spite of these policies.

Financially, Chevron has come under pressure, especially with large cost overruns on a significant oil field project in Kazakhstan and reporting its lowest level of oil and gas reserves in more than a decade. Despite these difficulties, Chevron was able to achieve a net income of $17 billion in 2024. Though down from a record $35.5 billion in 2022, this number is still among the strongest in corporate history.
Chevron’s CEO, Mike Wirth, has publicly condemned California’s business climate, claiming that several state laws drive up costs, harm consumers, and discourage capital formation. These factors, according to Wirth, do not bode well for the state’s economy or its consumers.
Although the business has promised that these layoffs won’t harm jobs connected to its California refineries, industry analysts warn Chevron’s cost-cutting initiatives could affect output, hence raising gasoline prices in the state. This comes at a time when the company’s suggested $53 billion acquisition of Hess Corporation is still under regulatory review, a deal expected to create notable operational benefits.
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Chevron’s decision fits with a larger pattern among big companies moving to cities like Houston drawn by lower operating expenses, a favorable regulatory environment, and a robust energy sector infrastructure. This action shows a constant change in the scene of American corporate bases driven by economic and regulatory factors changing the sector.