|
WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Australia
: Mines
Another coal mine closes in Australia
By Peter Stavropoulos
26 August 1998
Closures and job cuts over the past four years have reduced
the membership of the Australian mineworkers' union by a quarter.
In 1994 the mining division of the Construction Forestry Mining
and Energy Union (CFMEU) had 23,500 members in the states of Queensland
and New South Wales. Today, the figure is 17,500.
The latest closure sheds a revealing light on the underlying
economic processes at work and the role of the union leadership.
On August 8, Allied Meridian, the owners of the Metropolitan
Colliery, north of Wollongong, announced the mine's closure. This
will mean the destruction of the mine's remaining 128 jobs. Some
30 of the most senior employees will remain working over the next
five or six weeks cutting coal before the mine finally shuts down
and they too are dismissed.
Metropolitan has a 110-year history and was one of the oldest
operating mines in Australia. Allied management blamed the oversupply
of coal and low prices on the world market for the closure. The
economic meltdown in Asia has accelerated a long-term decline
in demand and prices. Metropolitan's closure comes only 18 months
after Allied Meridian purchased the mine, which had been closed
by its previous owner, Shell.
Miners are to be terminated despite doubling their output in
the last 18 months, from less than 5,000 tons per worker per year
to 10,000 tons, far above previous records set at Metropolitan.
The CFMEU actively sought out prospective buyers for the mine
after its last closure, guaranteeing that a new industrial agreement
would be struck to boost production. Union leaders urged miners
to accept job losses and change work practices at management's
request.
Union officials consistently told Metropolitan miners that
their "sacrifices" would ensure the mine's continued
operation. Just two months ago, former Southern Districts union
president (and now national union general secretary) Mick Watson
wrote in the union's monthly journal Common Cause there
was "Good News at Metrop".
The "good news" according to Watson, who used to
be directly responsible for Metropolitan, was that 49 miners who
had been retrenched by Shell in November 1996 had just been paid
the last of their retrenchment entitlements.
These entitlements were paid under a deal reached between the
union, the mine's financial receivers and the state Labor government,
which provided a $1.2 million loan. A production levy was agreed
upon to finance the payments, so essentially a portion of the
massive increase in production over the past 18 months paid for
the redundancy entitlements.
This productivity deal was not the first. In April 1994, the
union struck an enterprise agreement with an earlier owner, Denhurst,
under which production increased from 800, 000 tons of coal in
1990 to 1.6 million tons in 1995. At that time there were 208
miners.
Then too Watson wrote a glowing article on the future of Metropolitan.
Under the headline, "Metropolitan turnaround, a lesson for
all," he presented the agreement as a model of union-management
collaboration, where both parties would be successful.
The bitter lesson, however, is that no amount of sacrifice
of conditions to meet corporate profit requirements will defend
jobs. Instead, miners have been pitted against their fellow mineworkers
worldwide in an endless drive for higher tonnage rates.
In 1981 the Southern District coalfields employed over 12,000
miners, with many additional workers dependent directly or indirectly
on the operation of these mines. There now remain around 2,000
miners. It is stark testimony to the destructive capacity of the
private profit system and the refusal of the unions to challenge
it in any way.
See Also:
Another death in an Australian
coal pit
Hundreds turn out for miner's funeral
[25 July 1998]
Closure threatened in mining
disaster town of Moura
Australian coal union imposes sweeping job cuts
[18 June 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |