British
oil refinery workers end strike
Reuters/David
Moir

Striking oil refinery workers shout at INEOS
chairman Jim Ratcliffe as he leaves a building on site
during the second
day of strike action at the INEOS oil refinery in Grangemouth,
central Scotland on April 28, 2008.
GRANGEMOUTH,
Scotland
Petroleumworld.com, April 29, 2008
British oil refinery workers returned
to work Tuesday after a strike that hit fuel supplies and pushed oil prices
to record highs, as the government moved to prevent further
walk-outs.
The 48-hour strike over pensions by about 1,200 employees at the Grangemouth
site, between Glasgow and Edinburgh, ended at 6:00 am (0500 GMT), although it
could take some time before normal operations are resumed.
Britain's Business Secretary John Hutton travelled to central Scotland to meet
officials from owners Ineos and the Unite trade union, as well as representatives
from the oil and gas industries.
" Now is the time for Unite and Ineos to get back to the negotiating table," Hutton
said in a statement ahead of his visit, hours after Prime Minister Gordon
Brown met Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond about the dispute.
" This is what I will be saying in my meetings today, and ACAS (the Advisory,
Conciliation and Arbitration Service) stands ready. This is where the dispute
must end," Hutton added.
But although Unite has not called any fresh strikes, its national officer Phil
McNulty said if talks were to continue, Ineos needs to halt its plans to close
its final salary pension scheme.
" The Grangemouth workers are having to strike to defend their existing pension
scheme which, despite the fact it is well-funded and in profit, their hugely
rich employer, Ineos, wants to close it," he said in a statement.
For their part, Ineos bosses said they had made "concession after concession" to
keep talks going.
Unite's joint general secretary Tony Woodley was to meet Ineos owner Jim
Ratcliffe in London later for "exploratory" talks, a union official
told AFP.
The government is keen to avoid further strike action, just days after an estimated
400,000 public sector workers, including teachers and civil servants, walked
out over below-inflation pay rises.
Britain's offshore energy industry body Oil and Gas UK has estimated that the
dispute could cost the domestic economy more than 50 million pounds (63.8 million
euros, 99.4 million dollars).
The walkout forced the closure of the refinery's neighbouring Forties pipeline,
which supplies 40 percent of Britain's oil and gas.
The pipeline brings more than 700,000 barrels of crude oil ashore every day,
supplying Britain and international markets. It cannot function without power
and steam from Grangemouth.
Queues formed at many petrol stations across Scotland and into northern England
amid concern that the pumps would run dry. There were reports of bulk-buying
and profiteering.
Many petrol stations introduced rationing, as the Scottish government ordered
fuel to be imported by sea tankers to boost supplies.
The dispute also helped push oil close to 120 dollars per barrel on Monday in
a sector affected by a weaker US dollar, supply concernes and the OPEC cartel's
reluctance to increase output further.
Meanwhile oil giants Royal Dutch Shell and BP made combined profits in excess
of seven billion pounds in the first three months of this year on the back of
rising prices, figures showed.
Speaking to BBC television after arriving at Grangemouth, Hutton said both
sides needed to come to a "sensible agreement".
" If there is more industrial action, more people are going to suffer. That,
I don't believe, is justified," he added.
But in London hundreds of road haulage firms were to protest against the high
price of diesel on Tuesday. They complain that the price of diesel has risen
by 30 percent in the last 12 months, sending many firms to the wall.
Story from AFP
AFP 29 0830 GMT 04 08
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