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Strikes at Australian commodity ports to continue

  • Market: Coal, Coking coal, Fertilizers, Natural gas
  • 19/12/24

Workers at major commodity ports across Australia will strike next week, in response to stalling negotiations with port operators.

Queensland

In northern Queensland, unions representing almost 200 workers have notified the Gladstone Ports (GPC) that they plan to launch work stoppages at the LNG and coal hub next week, a source told Argus.

The strike actions follow an earlier day-long work stoppage involving over 100 workers at the port that began earlier this week.

The dispute between GPC and its workers is centred around wage and rostering proposals. GPC and unions representing its workers have not scheduled any further bargaining meetings, multiple sources have told Argus.

Gladstone's ship queue has exceeded 30 ships multiple times since work stoppages began on 17 December. This compared with a queue of 48 ships in December 2023, after Cyclone Jasper forced three other north Queensland ports to turn vessels away for four days.

To the south of Gladstone, 100 workers at the Qube-operated Port of Brisbane will also stop working between 23-27 December, according to maritime logistics firm GAC.

The stoppage announcement follows a day-long strike at multiple Qube ports, which began on 16 December. Before the strike began, a Qube representative warned that strikes at its ports would "inevitably [cause] disruption to supply chains for key commodities like fertiliser, grain, and steel."

The Port of Brisbane is a major oil and meat port.

New South Wales

Along Australia's eastern coast, workers at Qube's major coal, grain, and fertiliser port in Port Kembla are planning to strike for a longer period of time than their colleagues in other parts of the country.

GAC has reported that workers will launch 13 rolling work stoppages at the port between 20 December and 3 January. There are 141 members of the Construction, Forestry and Maritime Employees Union (CFMEU) participated in a strike authorisation vote at the site in early September, and have been engaged in industrial actions since then.

Port Kembla also faced a day-long work stoppage earlier this week.

Northern Territory

Union members in Darwin are planning to not work for 1½ day beginning on 23 December. Like the Port of Brisbane, Darwin tends to handle livestock and oil products.

But only 37 workers were eligible to participate in a successful mid-September union ballot authorising work stoppages at the port.


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