Buyer sought for Grangemouth plant

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 22 Oktober 2013 | 16.50

22 October 2013 Last updated at 05:35 ET
grangemouth from air

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BBC Scotland cameras took to the skies to show the scale of the Grangemouth refinery and petrochemical plant.

The Scottish government is trying to find a buyer for the Grangemouth refinery and petrochemicals plant.

Scotland's Finance Secretary John Swinney said ministers had been having discussions "with other players".

An on-going dispute between owners Ineos and the union Unite has resulted in the plant being temporarily closed.

Grangemouth plays an important part in bringing ashore North Sea oil and supplies petrol and diesel to the whole of Scotland and the north of England.

Speaking to BBC Radio Scotland's Good Morning Scotland programme, Mr Swinney said: "I don't think it will come as any surprise to anyone that the government is looking for alternative options and there certainly will be other players around the globe interested in this particular plant.

Grangemouth

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"We have certainly had discussions with other players and the Scottish government will engage in any discussions that are helpful to ensure Grangemouth can continue to make a major contribution to the health and well-being of the Scottish economy."

He added that government ownership was "not appropriate" and that there was a "buyer out there".

The owners of the Grangemouth complex are to meet later to decide on the plant's fate.

Unite union said half of the 1,350-strong workforce had rejected Ineos' proposed change to contracts.

The company gave employees until 18:00 on Monday to accept plans, including a pay freeze and downgrading of pensions.

The union said the refusal of the workforce to accept the new contract terms was a mandate to return to talks and fire up the plant.

It was shut down last week by Ineos in response to a strike threat over the disciplining of a union representative at the complex.

Ineos had said the plant would close without new investment and changes to workers' terms and conditions.

Senior figures at Ineos, which operates and owns most of the 2.6 sq-mile site, are to consider the workforce's response to the offer.

In doing so, they will also look at the patterns of the result across the plant, and across its varied technical skills.

The firm said it would communicate the shareholders' views directly to the workforce on Wednesday.

However, Ineos has warned a decision on the plant's fate could take several days.

A spokesman added: "Ineos is now considering the numbers of employees that have given their support to its survival plan.

"Consultations on the survival plan formally began last Thursday. It will take 45 days before any changes to terms and conditions can be introduced and 60 days before any changes to pensions can be implemented."

Transitional payment

The plan includes freezing the basic salary and offering no bonuses until at least the end of 2016.

The shift allowance would also be reduced and pensions transferred from a final salary to a defined contribution scheme.

The company has said no job cuts were expected. It also said employees who support the plan at this stage would receive a transitional payment of up to £15,000 and an enhanced employer contribution to their pension.

Ineos said it would take 45 days before any changes to terms and conditions could be introduced and 60 days before any changes to pensions could be implemented.

Majority shareholder Jim Ratcliffe has said if the petro-chemical plant goes, the neighbouring refinery is unlikely to survive.

He has also said Ineos may not be willing to pay the cost of a prolonged shutdown.

The workforce had to respond to the offer on pay and pensions by Monday evening.

Unite said, by the 18:00 deadline, it had been given 665 forms rejecting the offer.

A day earlier, Ineos had said it had already received about 300 positive returns for the offer.

The refinery, which has an annual capacity of 10 million tonnes, provides most of the fuel in Scotland, Northern England and Northern Ireland.

The petrochemicals facility at the site manufactures more than two million tonnes of chemical products per year, which are later transformed into essential items such as bottles and pipes, cabling and insulation and food packaging.


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