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Q&A: how did union standoff come to this?



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Q: What is the dispute about?
A: The Unite union has called the strike in protest at plans by Grangemouth owners Ineos to close its final salary pension scheme to new workers and to make other changes to pensions.

Q: Is there a personality clash?

A: Tony W
oodley, Unite joint leader, and Jim Ratcliffe, major owner of the Ineos group, are poles apart.

Woodley has risen through the ranks and has developed a reputation of being one of the most respected trade unionists in the UK and Ireland, fighting against Ford and British Airways. Ratcliffe is the 10th richest man in Britain. Before founding the company a decade ago, Ratcliffe worked for oil giant Esso and the private equity group Advent. Ineos is the world's third-largest chemical company.

Q: What is the union argument?

A: Unite maintained there were no grounds for closing the scheme, which it said was in surplus and only needed £16m a year funding by the company. Unite also claimed that Grangemouth made up to £3m a day in profits. The changes being proposed by Ineos would reduce workers' payouts by an average of £10,000 a year, said Unite.

Q: How does the company respond to these claims?

A: Ineos said it would still provide generous pensions for its employees, stating that a quarter of the entire salary bill at Grangemouth went into the pension fund. The final salary arrangement will remain for existing workers but the main difference will be that staff will have to make a contribution for the first time, bringing them into line with the majority of workers elsewhere in the UK.

Q: What exactly does the Grangemouth oil refinery do?

A: The refinery, which sits on the Firth of Forth, is the only one north of the border and is Scotland's main fuel supplier. The plant is directly connected to the Forties oil pipeline in the North Sea and has an annual capacity of about 10 million tonnes of crude oil. The oil is processed into petrol, diesel, plastic and other materials at various temperatures across a number of different plants in the Grangemouth facility.

Q: What are the consequences of the strike for Grangemouth?

A: Ineos said investment of £750m will be put at risk if the dispute is not resolved. Failure to modernise the plant and reform pension arrangements will lead to a review of Grangemouth's future, bosses have said.

Q: How big is Grangemouth?

A: The site is spread over 1,700 acres of land – the size of 640 football pitches – and houses a number of separate businesses run by Ineos, which acquired Grangemouth from BP in 2005.

Q: What are the prospects of more talks?

A: Two days of talks at the London headquarters of the conciliation service Acas collapsed earlier this week and there are no plans for an early resumption of negotiations.



The full article contains 488 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Matt there,

somewhere 27/04/2008 12:46:43
The 10th richest person in the UK wants to reduce the pensions of the people who helped make him the 10th richest person in the UK. And makes dark threats of "I'll have to let you all go" if he doesn't get his way.



2

Davy,

Scotland 28/04/2008 13:11:40
A typical case of corporate bullying.
We know about this one as it has every ones attention, they are all at it.
Greedy multinational parasites with no social conscience.
They would be happy to turn the UK into a third world country.
The millions they already have would then be worth more.
Nationalise the lot, it is the only way.
3

Freethinker,

Penicuik 04/05/2008 14:38:05
Well done the Grangemeouth workers - about time someone stood up to the greedy bar stewards running things!

 

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