Shell pay battle escalates at Prelude LNG off Australia
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[July 20, 2022] By
Sonali Paul
MELBOURNE (Reuters) -Shell Plc on Wednesday
told workers at its Prelude floating liquefied natural gas (FLNG)
facility it would stop paying them as of Monday after they extended
industrial action for two more weeks over a long-running wage dispute.
Shell last week began shutting down the 3.6 million tonne a year site
off northwestern Australia and told customers it would be unable to
supply LNG cargoes for as long as the protected industrial action - work
stoppages approved by Australia's Fair Work Commission - continued. The
action began on June 10.
The global major said on Wednesday it had tried to work around the
stoppages by the Offshore Alliance and find other work for staff and
contractors to ensure they would be paid, but that was no longer
possible.
"As a consequence, we will be resorting to lock outs as the mechanism
available under the Fair Work Act. Once the lock outs are in effect,
people will no longer be paid if they are not mobilised to the
facility," a Shell spokesperson said.
Prelude is co-owned by Shell, Inpex, Korea Gas Corp (KOGAS) and a
subsidiary of Taiwan's state-run Chinese Petroleum Corp.
The extended shutdown will further disrupt the LNG market with European
buyers scrambling for cargoes to make up for lost Russian supply, due to
sanctions on Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine that it calls a "special
military operation".
"Given that Australia is Japan's largest supplier and Korea's
second-largest supplier, any cargoes not delivered would add to the
energy issues faced by these two countries, and indeed the rest of
Asia," research firm EnergyQuest said in a report last week.
The Offshore Alliance, which combines the Australian Workers' Union and
the Maritime Union of Australia, said Shell had refused to bargain since
workers rejected the company's latest offer nine days ago.
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A liquefied natural gas (LNG) tanker is tugged towards a thermal
power station in Futtsu, east of Tokyo, Japan November 13, 2017.
REUTERS/Issei Kato
"If Shell is actually serious about a lock-out, it will significantly increase
the chances of breakdown and endanger the safety of workers on site," Australian
Workers' Union National Secretary Daniel Walton said in a statement, adding that
the company had been "stonewalling" the union for 19 months.
He did not say what the unions could do next.
The Offshore Alliance is using a pay deal agreed with Japan's Inpex Corp in
April as the benchmark for talks with other oil and gas majors, including
Chevron Corp at its Wheatstone platform.
Inpex agreed to base rates of pay between A$125,000 and A$258,000 ($86,000 and
$178,000) plus allowances, up from between A$92,000 and A$102,000.
"With global energy prices in a bull market, there is no better time than now
for the Offshore Alliance to negotiate good EBAs (enterprise bargaining
agreements) for our members," the alliance said in a posting on its Facebook
site, on its talks with Chevron.
($1 = 1.4482 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Himani Sarkar and David Evans)
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