The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Go on loan to save jobs

Exclusive: North Sea could adopt football model

- BY KEITH FINDLAY Comment, Page 25

Redundancy-threatened oil and gas workers could be sent out on loan like footballer­s in a bid to retain skills during the downturn. Offshore bosses have visited Pittodrie to pick the Dons’ brains about the system.

The North Sea oil and gas industry is looking to a football-style loan transfer scheme to resolve skills shortages after it emerges from a long and brutal downturn.

Aberdeen Football Club (AFC) has already hosted a workshop aimed at identifyin­g a suitable model for the offshore sector.

Though still at an early stage of developmen­t, the idea has been kicking around since it was mooted early last year in a workstream group establishe­d through the Scottish Government’s Energy Jobs Taskforce (EJT).

Once properly up and running, the revolution­ary scheme would see groups of workers loaned out from one company to another in an unpreceden­ted shared effort to keep labour costs down.

It would also mean fewer lay-offs if firms are going through a quiet spell.

Current employment conditions in the industry means it is likely to be a while before the initiative is working as intended, but it is seen as a potential solution to future overcapaci­ty at some companies and manpower shortages at others.

EJT workstream group leader Kevin Higgins, vicepresid­ent, human resources, Petrofac, said “best endeavours” to put the loan scheme into practice had to date been thwarted by the longevity of the downturn.

But the idea had “a lot of support in principle” and been endorsed by all the various parties who sit on the taskforce, he said.

Union boss Jake Molloy, general-secretary of the offshore energy branch of the RMT, said: “This idea is sound and we will support it where we can.

“We should be looking at every area possible in order to retain skills . . . and sustain employment. This is something our organisati­on is trying to promote right down through the ranks.”

AFC football operations manager Steve Gunn said the Dons hosted the workshop as the result of an approach by Aberdeen City Council chief executive Angela Scott, who is part of the EJT.

“It was an interestin­g concept, looking at the loan system in football and how facets of it might suit other industries,” Mr Gunn said.

He added: “We have made efforts as an organisati­on to learn from other clubs and industries over the last few years, and so it was an opportunit­y to pass on some of our own knowledge and experience­s.

“There are a number of synergies between the aims of the taskforce and the club, including developmen­t and retention of talent and skills, so it made a lot of sense for us to collaborat­e on this initiative.”

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