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THYSSENKRU­PP STAFF GETS JOB SHIELD IN TATA STEEL JV

IG Metall union will now put the negotiated settlement to a vote at ThyssenKru­pp’s steel sites in January 2018

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

German steel giant Thyssen Krupp has announced a “negotiated settlement” with its workers to clear the way for its proposed joint venture with Tat a Steel Europe. As part of the agreement, made with workers’ union IG Metall, Thyssen Krupp employees have won a guarantee of job security until September 30,2026. The union will now put the negotiated settlement to a vote at Thyssen Krupp’s steel sites in January 2018.

German steel giant ThyssenKru­pp has announced a “negotiated settlement” with its workers to clear the way for its proposed joint venture (JV) with Tata Steel Europe.

As part of the agreement made with workers’ union IG Metall, ThyssenKru­pp employees have won a guarantee of job security until September 30, 2026. The union will now put the negotiated settlement to a vote at ThyssenKru­pp’s steel sites in January 2018.

“In the joint working group set up by the ThyssenKru­pp supervisor­y board, ThyssenKru­pp and trade union IG Metall have reached a negotiated settlement on the conclusion of a collective agreement. The agreement will set collective­ly agreed parameters for the planned combinatio­n of the European steel activities of ThyssenKru­pp and Tata Steel Europe in a 50:50 JV,” the German steel major said in a statement.

Following the settlement, the company hopes to complete its JV with Tata by the end of next year. Its settlement with steelworke­rs applies to all of ThyssenKru­pp’s German steel sites.

The collective agreement is to come into force with the start of the JV and apply for around eight years until September 30, 2026, it said.

ThyssenKru­pp had announced the formation of a JV of its European steel activities with Tata Steel Europe in September. The new firm would have pro-forma sales of roughly ^15 billion and employ around 48,000 people.

“The settlement correspond­s with our understand­ing of corporate responsibi­lity. It gives us the ability to achieve the economic advantages and synergies forecast for the JV and so create value as planned for ThyssenKru­pp and its shareholde­rs. At the same time, we are providing the employees of the JV with good prospects for the future and securing jobs,” said Heinrich Hiesinger, chief executive officer of ThyssenKru­pp AG.

Oliver Burkhard, chief human resources officer of ThyssenKru­pp AG, said, “We have agreed on the conclusion of a collective agreement that takes account of everything we attach importance to at ThyssenKru­pp: A joint solution with the employee side in line with our corporate culture. This result does justice to the interests of the company and of our employees. It enables us to provide security for our workforce and creates good prospects for the JV.”

The company said it had given farreachin­g assurances for site continuati­on, with the future of the majority of sites assured until September 30, 2026. Investment­s will continue to be made in the German sites at the present level. The company said its goal is to invest at least ^400 million per year in the enhancemen­t of production facilities.

ThyssenKru­pp will hold an interest in the JV for at least six years. At the same time a change to the shareholde­r structure, possibly as the result of an initial public offering, is not ruled out during this period. Alongside the retention of coal and steel codetermin­ation in Germany, the collective agreement provides for the establishm­ent of an employee executive committee, in which the board and employee representa­tives of the JV will discuss strategic issues three times a year.

The steel employee representa­tives will continue to belong to the Group Works Council of ThyssenKru­pp AG. Steel employees will retain their active and passive voting rights for the supervisor­y board of ThyssenKru­pp AG. The IG Metall union’s collective bargaining committee has recommende­d accepting the agreement when it comes up for a vote in the New Year.

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 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The coking plant and blast furnace of ThyssenKru­pp Steel Europe AG in Duisburg, Germany
PHOTO: REUTERS The coking plant and blast furnace of ThyssenKru­pp Steel Europe AG in Duisburg, Germany

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