[Editor’s note: This story was updated at 12:01 p.m. CT Sept. 2.]

Exxon Mobil Corp. said Sept. 2 it is assessing worldwide job cuts as the global coronavirus pandemic slices into fuel demand, with the largest U.S. oil company announcing voluntary layoffs in Australia in the latest in a wave of cost cutting.

Exxon Mobil and other oil majors are axing jobs spurred by a historic collapse in fuel demand because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Exxon Mobil's job cuts will continue globally into 2021, with Australia the first country outside the U.S. where it has completed a review of its businesses, according to a person familiar with the process.

Prior to the pandemic, CEO Darren Woods pursued an ambitious spending plan to boost oil output and turn around sagging profits on a bet that a growing global middle class would demand more of its products.

However, the company has instead slashed capital spending by 30% this year and warned of deeper cuts in 2021, as it tries to defend a dividend paying nearly 9%. Exxon Mobil in July delivered the first back-to-back quarterly losses in at least 36 years.

"We have evaluations underway on a country-by-country basis to assess possible additional efficiencies to right-size our business and make it stronger for the future," spokesman Casey Norton said in emailed comments to Reuters.

Exxon Mobil initially said it had no plans for layoffs due to the pandemic, but on its latest earnings call on July 31, Senior Vice President Neil Chapman said that given reduced activity, it was evaluating its workforce requirements and looking at reductions "business by business and country by country."

In Australia, Exxon Mobil said Sept. 2 it had completed a review of its current and future project work in the country and was seeking volunteers to quit the company.

"This program will ensure the company manages through these unprecedented market conditions," it said in a statement.

The company did not say what percentage of its workforce it was seeking to cut, but said in Australia it would consider all employees who expressed an interest in voluntary redundancy.

"Until other study work is complete, it would be premature to draw conclusions for other countries," Norton said.

In the U.S., professional employees went through evaluations, with those ranked in the bottom category given 30 days to decide if they want to try to meet their manager’s goals or leave the company.

Exxon Mobil changed the system late last year so that more workers might land in that bottom category, with 8% to 10% of employees going through the process, up from 3% last year.

Employees can choose to leave with 90 days pay or are given 90 days to improve. The 30-day decision window is closing for many workers, so some are starting to leave Exxon Mobil, according to a person familiar with the evaluations.

The layoffs in Australia come as Exxon Mobil is looking to sell its 50% stake in the Bass Strait oil and gas joint venture, which analysts have estimated could fetch up to $3 billion.

Analysts have speculated it could also sell or close its Altona plant in Melbourne, Australia's oldest refinery.