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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Australia
: Mining
Striking Australian coal miners sacked
By Barry Jobson and Terry Cook
28 January 1999
Coal Operations Australia sacked the entire 42-member workforce
from its Chain Valley Bay underground coal mine near Newcastle,
New South Wales last week. The miners, who have been on strike
for nine weeks against the company's attempts to cut wages and
slash conditions, were informed that the mine would close on February
15, leaving only eight people from middle management to carry
out care and maintenance.
The sacked workers are maintaining a 24-hour picket at the
mine but the Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU)
has not organised industrial support by other miners or even from
Chain Valley's sister pits.
The strike began when the management demoted the workforce
to lower work classifications slashing their wages from $642 to
$565 a week after the miners refused to accept cuts to conditions
in a new work agreement.
The miners are particularly bitter because over the past period
both the union and management told them, that if they increased
productivity the mine could remain operational.
One miner complained that management constantly pointed out
that mine labour was cheaper in China and that Indonesian producers
were selling coal on the world market for less than $14 per tonne.
More than 200 jobs have been axed at the mine over the past
four years. Miners said they had accepted sharp cuts in working
conditions, including the introduction of staggered work breaks
to allow unbroken production and the reduction of manning on production
units from nine to five.
Productivity at the mine jumped from 80 tonnes per miner to
between 140 to 160 tonnes despite antiquated mining machinery
that continually breaks down.
One miner on the picket who worked at the mine for 19 years
told the World Socialist Web Site that the new wage levels
proposed by management would have reduced his weekly take-home
pay to about $400 per week.
"You can't expect a man to go underground for that type
of pay. It's no walk in the park underground. We work in a dirty
and dangerous environment. You suck in diesel fumes and coal dust
and at times work up to your knees in mud.
"In my time here I've lost two mates in accidents. Untold
numbers of men have been maimed with leg and back injuries. Some
have never been able to work again. There was an explosion here
not long ago and two men were severely burnt and scarred, physically
and emotionally."
Another striker said that safety would have been further undermined
if they had accepted management's demands. "The proposals
included working 12-hour shifts. It's dangerous enough being underground
for eight hours. When men get tired they lose concentration. They
make mistakes. For example they forget to check the roof and the
next minute it's down on your head."
He pointed out that one man was crushed to death in a roof
fall last year at the company's Wallarah mine, located only a
few kilometres away, and another at the Awaba mine, situated on
the same northern coal seam.
"This company is like a lot of others and not only in
the coal industry either. They pillage and rape the place looking
for a quick profit. Then they close down and leave nothing behind."
The job losses at Chain Valley are part of a wave of sackings
to hit the coal industry over the past two years, driven by the
sharpening competition for markets fuelled by falling global consumption.
In that period more than 3,000 coal mining jobs have been destroyed
in Australia. Over 2,470 of these have gone from mines in NSW
with 2,000 jobs lost in the coal-rich Hunter Valley, where the
Chain Valley pit is located.
At the same time productivity in NSW rose by 17 percent and
22 percent in Queensland, according to a report by the Australian
Bureau of Statistics. "In effect, the coal industry has the
same output with a third fewer employees," the report said.
The companies are maintaining and even increasing profit margins
by downsizing their workforces and driving up productivity. Profits
in the industry leapt by approximately $200 million to more than
$650 million in the year ending September 1998. BHP Coal registered
a 50 percent profit increase in the half year to November. Last
year the company slashed 1,300 jobs from its 14 coal mines in
NSW and Queensland, almost 25 percent of its workforce.
The companies have also benefitted from a rise in the Australian
dollar value of coal exports produced by the dramatic fall in
the currency's exchange value.
Major coal producers, such as Peabody Resources and Rio Tinto,
which between them account for more than one-quarter of the country's
steaming coal exports, said they were looking forward to greater
returns despite an expected fall in steaming coal prices following
the 18 percent cut in coking coal prices that emerged from recent
negotiations with Japan's steel producers.
Many Asian countries, such as South Korea, are turning to steaming
coal as a cheaper means to generate power and reduce production
costs. Korea Electric Power Corp, one of the biggest power companies
in the world, bought steaming coal at record levels last year
instead of using fuels such as liquefied natural gas and fuel
oil to fire power stations.
See Also:
Australian
miners union calls strike against coal price cuts
[18 December 1998]
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