Baker Hughes lays off 147 in Houston as Iran war uncertainty continues
By Rachel Nostrant, Staff Writer - 7/8/2026, 8:39 PM - 908 words
Faulty reasoning signals
- Red Herring - 29.3%
- Availability Heuristic - 15.9%
- Negativity Bias - 15.7%
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Oilfield services giant Baker Hughes lays off more than 100 at Houston manufacturing site
By Rachel Nostrant , Staff Writer July 8, 2026
Baker Hughes employs more than 1,300 employees in the Houston region.
Arnaldo Larios/ Courtesy Baker Hughes
Houston oil field services giant Baker Hughes will lay off 147 people, according to the Texas Workforce Commission.
The layoffs come as the oil and gas industry faces boomeranging oil prices stemming from the war in Iran , widespread industry consolidation and job automation.
The layoffs across the company’s manufacturing, engineering, materials, purchasing and other support units have already begun, according to the notice filed with Texas Workforce Commission July 1. They are expected to impact employees at Baker Hughes’ Emmott Road facility in Northwest Houston, a major 171,600-square-foot manufacturing and testing site.
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“Baker Hughes continually reviews our portfolio and business operations to ensure we are best positioned to serve our customers and deliver on our long-term growth objectives,” a spokesperson for the company said. “These decisions are always difficult and are made with the utmost sensitivity to the impact on employees, communities and customers.”
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The cuts “could be construed as a ‘mass layoff' " or “plant closing,” according to the company’s layoff notice.
Impacted employees have already been notified, the letter said.
Job cuts have plagued Houston’s oil giants over the last few years. Chevron cut more than 1,200 employees in Houston last year after announcing plans to reduce its global workforce by 20%. Hess Corp. cut more than 500 of its headquarter employees in Houston after its much-anticipated and embattled merger with Chevron was completed last year.
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The Greater Houston Partnership warned last year that declining crude prices could lead to a loss of more than 3,000 jobs across Houston’s oil and gas sector in 2026.
But the market turned unpredictable after the U.S. 's January incursion into Venezuela to re-open the country’s stagnant oil industry and the global oil shortage created by the months long shuttering of the Strait of Hormuz, the shipping channel off the coast of Iran responsible for moving 20% of the world’s petroleum products.
Since then, Dallas Federal Reserve Bank economists have said , Texas’ oil and gas companies appear to be acting “far more financially disciplined than in the past.”
Rachel Nostrant is a Marine Corps veteran and an energy reporter focused on the oil and gas industry for the Houston Chronicle.
Before joining the Chronicle, Nostrant was at the New York Times, covering general U.S. news and in-depth stories on people with disabilities and veterans. Prior to the Times, Nostrant provided freelance reporting on conflict and the invasion of Ukraine for Insider, New York Magazine and Military.com, the latter with whom she won a Top 10 Military Veterans in Journalism award in 2024 for an investigation into child abuse at military daycare centers. She has also interned for Reuters, the Associated Press, and VTDigger in Vermont.
Nostrant is a native of Virginia Beach, Va., and holds bachelors degrees in political science and journalism from Penn State and a masters degree in business reporting from New York University.
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