December Jobs Report Marks a Year of Adjustment for the Energy Services Workforce

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

HOUSTON — The Energy Workforce & Technology Council released its December 2025 jobs report, marking the end of a year of workforce adjustment, market uncertainty, and federal labor data disruptions.

Energy services employment totaled 629,372 jobs in December, a decline of 184 positions from November, according to preliminary data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Energy Workforce analysis.

December’s report concludes a fluctuating year for the sector. Employment peaked in April 2025 at 640,001 jobs, before slowly trending downward through much of the second half of the year. By year’s end, energy services employment stood approximately 11,000 jobs below its spring high. Even with this decline, employment levels remained relatively stable compared to prior industry downturns.

2025 Energy Services Employment

·       January: 636,164

·       February: 639,349

·       March: 639,483

·       April: 640,001

·       May: 636,838

·       June: 635,848

·       July: 632,951

·       August: 632,160

·       September: 629,523

·       October: 632,559

·       November: 629,556

·       December: 629,372

Year over year, the energy services sector experienced an average employment decline of approximately 2.3 percent compared to 2024. This change reflects the difference between average monthly employment in 2025 and the average for 2024, amid ongoing challenges in the operating environment shaped by market uncertainty, tariffs, and rising costs.

According to the BLS, the national job market added 50,000 jobs in December, and the unemployment rate declined to 4.4 percent. Overall, U.S. employment growth in 2025 was the weakest since the 2020 recession, underscoring the broader economic slowdown facing multiple sectors.

“2025 tested the OFS sector’s workforce’s resilience,” said Energy Workforce President Molly Determan. “Market uncertainty, tariffs, permitting delays, and inconsistent data reporting added complexity to planning and hiring.”

Despite the challenges, Determan emphasized the sector’s long-term outlook.

“OFS companies invested in their workforce and provided long-term training and planning. This focus on readiness and resilience positions the industry to adapt as conditions change.”

State By State Breakdown (December 2025)

TX    306,693

LA    52,553

OK    47,895

CO    25,553

NM    23,539

CA    23,041

PA    22,783

ND    19,573

WY    14,605

OH    10,448

AK    9,755

WV    9,629

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About Energy Workforce & Technology Council

Energy Workforce & Technology Council is the national trade association for the global energy technology and services sector, representing more than 650,000 U.S. jobs in the technology-driven energy value chain. Energy Workforce works to advance member policy priorities and empower the energy workforce of the future.

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