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Ineos decision due on Grangemouth

Source BBC News@ tienganhvui.com


Workers from Grangemouth chemical plant Workers from Grangemouth chemical plant accepted a survival plan put forward by Ineos



Staff at Grangemouth are waiting to hear if owner Ineos will grant a reprieve to the closure-threatened petrochemical plant.


About 800 jobs are under threat - and the company has already laid off about 2,000 contractors since it shut down the complex.


Ineos is due to make an official statement on the plant's future later.


Political leaders had expressed optimism after the union accepted a survival plan put forward by Ineos.


The BBC understands that an agreement was being drawn up for workers to sign, which would need approval from major Ineos shareholder Jim Ratcliffe.


On Thursday, Scotland's finance secretary John Swinney and the Scottish Secretary Alastair Carmichael held talks with unions and management at the site. Afterwards they said they were hopeful.


However, Ineos is yet to confirm whether it will reverse its decision to close the petrochemical plant at the complex.



Background: Grangemouth dispute



  • The dispute first flared up in the summer over the company's treatment of Unite official Stephen Deans, who has worked at Grangemouth for more than 20 years

  • He was accused of trying to rig the selection of a Labour candidate for the Falkirk seat at Westminster but was later cleared

  • But Ineos has been carrying out its own investigation into claims Mr Deans improperly used the refinery for union business. Its findings are due to be published on Friday

  • Unite members at Grangemouth had been due to strike last Sunday over Mr Dean's treatment

  • Ineos had closed the plant ahead of the industrial action and said it would not be restarting the facility even after the strike was called off

  • It said Grangemouth was losing huge amounts of money and faced going bust unless staff agreed to a survival plan

  • The proposals included changes to pay and conditions. They were rejected by about half of the site's workers

  • The decision that the petrochemical plant should close was taken at a meeting of Ineos shareholders, including chairman and founder Jim Ratcliffe, on Tuesday




An internal investigation by Ineos into the union convenor, Stephen Deans, is also due to be published later.


It was the firm's treatment of Mr Deans that first ignited the breakdown in industrial relations - before it became a battle for the survival of Scotland's largest industrial site.


The dispute at the site escalated to the threat of strike action.


This was dropped but Ineos shut down the plant and issued an offer of revised terms and conditions in a survival plan, which was initially rejected by union members.


The proposals included ending their final salary pension scheme and cut shift allowances.


Previously, Ineos said it was ready to invest £300m in Grangemouth if workers agreed to the new terms and conditions.


The company said it had decided to close the plant because half the workforce had refused to accept the cost-cutting plan essential for the facility's survival.


Ineos chairman and founder Jim Ratcliffe had said at the weekend that if the petrochemical plant closed it was likely the neighbouring refinery would go as well.


The refinery provides most of the fuel to Scotland, the north of England and Northern Ireland.


Ineos had said liquidators for the petrochemical plant would be appointed within a week.


1,700-acre site; 1,370 staff - 800 jobs affected; 2,000 contractors employed; 10,000 jobs rely indirectly on the site; estimated to be 8% of Scotland’s manufacturing industry; supplies 70% of the fuel used at Scotland's filling stations; petrochemicals plant manufactures 2m tonnes of chemical products every year; refinery processes 200,000 barrels of crude oil every day. Source: Ineos, Stirling University





Đăng ký: Tieng Anh Vui

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