The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Safety jobs face axe at flare row plant

MOSSMORRAN: Union warns lives could be put at risk

- AILEEN ROBERTSON

Union officials have warned lives could be put at risk if Shell presses ahead with plans to axe maintenanc­e staff at Mossmorran in Fife.

Unite industrial officer Bob MacGregor said the firm was planning to cut its 77-strong contractor workforce by 63 and that this would pose “potentiall­y critical health and safety concerns”.

He added: “These proposals are of such a brutal nature that we are being informed by local union representa­tives this could impair the condition and maintenanc­e of the installati­ons.

“We call on Shell to step back and re-engage with Unite to find alternativ­e solutions because lives are at risk here.”

Shell has challenged Unite’s f igures , s ta t ing i ts maintenanc­e team would be reduced by just 12%, not the 80% claimed by the union.

“The safety of our plants, our teams and our communitie­s is paramount,” said a spokesman for the company.

It comes at a time when Mossmorran is under intense scrutiny following repeated bouts of flaring from the neighbouri­ng Fife Ethylene Plant, operated by ExxonMobil.

Alex Rowley, left, Labour MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, said: “Communitie­s around Mossmorran are living in fear.”

Plans to s lash maintenanc­e staff at the troubled Mossmorran complex in Fife would critically compromise its safety, union officials have warned.

Trade union Unite said it understood Shell was intending to axe 63 out of 77 contractor jobs at the Fife NGL Plant and this could put lives at risk.

Shell has disputed the union’s claims of an 80% cut in workforce, insisting the safety of its plants was “paramount” and would not be compromise­d.

Posts under threat are said to include scaffold inspectors and supervisor­s, riggers and rigging supervisor­s, forklift drivers, general assistants and mechanical supervisor­s.

Potential redundanci­es at Shell’s Northern Systems and Plants operations, which also include the St Fergus gas terminal near Peterhead, come at a time when Mossmorran is under intense scrutiny following repeated bouts of flaring from the neighbouri­ng Fife Ethylene Plant, which is operated by ExxonMobil.

According to Shell, the number of workers from contractor Kaefer across Mossmorran and St Fergus would be reduced by 15, while the company’s core ma in tenance team , comprising staff and contractor­s, would be cut from 125 to 110.

The company said additional contractor workers would be brought in when required for future maintenanc­e projects but Unite industrial officer Bob MacGregor said: “Unite is deeply concerned the level of cuts proposed by Shell at Mossmorran will result in potentiall­y critical health and safety concerns.

“There are a number of ongoing issues at the plant which we have worked hard to resolve with the companies involved onsite. However, these proposals are of such a brutal nature we are being informed by local union representa­tives this could impair the condition and maintenanc­e of the installati­ons.

“We call on Shell to re engage with Unite to find alternativ­e solutions because lives are at risk.”

Unite said it had been in consultati­on with contractor Kaefer for weeks to stave off compulsory redundanci­es being enforced by the oil giant.

At St Fergus, the union said 46 out of 52 jobs could be lost and it warned fire and safety responses to any incidents at the plants could be severely impacted.

Vic Fraser of Unite said some trades would be “wiped out” at St Fergus. He added: “It is not that there is no work to be carried out here, there is, but rather Shell have decided the fabric and maintenanc­e work on site will pause until 2022.

“We are always told safety comes first but our members are not only concerned for their livelihood­s but fear for colleagues left to work there, the community and any environmen­tal impact a potential incident could have.”

The Shell spokesman said: “We do not recognise these figures, as the planned reduction in our core maintenanc­e team is 12%. Other reductions are due to seasonal projects already completed.

“The safety of our plants, teams and our communitie­s is paramount and will not be compromise­d.

“Maintenanc­e will be done at the right time by the right specialist­s. They will now be contracted for specific projects, rather than being at the plants full-time. At this time of economic uncertaint­y, we know this news will be very difficult for contractor colleagues whose jobs may be impacted as a result.”

Alex Rowley, Labour MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife, said he would be writing to Shell and the Unite union about job cuts.

He said: “Communitie­s are terrified of Mossmorran, where there are serious question marks over the safety. To lose all these jobs would I think add to these concerns and you have to ask, what future does that plant have?”

Mark Ruskell MSP, the Scottish Greens’ energy spokespers­on, said: “This shocking decision to cut maintenanc­e staff by Shell comes despite clear warnings about health and safety implicatio­ns from the workers themselves.

“I will write to the Health and Safety Executive on behalf of these workers for urgent clarificat­ion of the implicatio­ns of these job cuts.

“If the sites have ongoing issues but the company still wants to dramatical­ly slash its staff, there are serious questions about its longterm commitment to these installati­ons.”

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 ??  ?? NUISANCE NEIGHBOURS: The sky is lit up during a bout of flaring at the ethylene plant as a union says cuts could risk lives.
NUISANCE NEIGHBOURS: The sky is lit up during a bout of flaring at the ethylene plant as a union says cuts could risk lives.
 ??  ?? CONCERNS: Flaring at the Mossmorran gas complex in Fife, where plans to slash maintenanc­e staff have raised fears safety could be compromise­d.
CONCERNS: Flaring at the Mossmorran gas complex in Fife, where plans to slash maintenanc­e staff have raised fears safety could be compromise­d.

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