strike at TotalEnergies fuel refineries raises fears of shortage

by time news

Published on :

In France, of the seven refineries in France, five were shut down, including that of Normandy, which represents 22% of refining capacity in the territory. Employees are demanding an increase in wages and recruitment. Total announced a few days ago the redistribution of 2.62 billion euros in dividends to its shareholders.

Initiated last Tuesday in several oil sites of the TotalEnergies group, the strike continues this week. Even if the mobilization is unequal on the territory according to the unions, the strike continued this Wednesday in five of the seven refineries of metropolitan France, including the refinery of Normandy, near Le Havre, which represents 22% of the refining capacities on the territory. It is the most important of the eight French sites which manufacture fuel, according to Ufip, the Professional Syndicate of Oil Tankers. For a week no more drop of fuel has left the Le Havre site.

This poses a risk of shortage in places. TotalEnergies, which owns several of them, ensures that it ” there is no lack of fuel ».

« We are not starting with the aim of organizing shortages. The important thing for us is above all to hit our boss’s wallet because we are faced with a management that wants to be intransigent, which considers that wages are not the time to talk about it, to wait for November 15, explains Alexis Antonioli, general secretary of the CGT Total union on the platforms in Normandy. For us, there is urgency on wages. »

The CGT calls in particular for a “ salary catch-up » up to 10% for the year 2022, to compensate for inflation. The union leader reports a “deep dissatisfaction of employees” whether on wages or working conditions. ” All this negative context means that today, yes, wages are the match. But there is a malaise that is much deeper than that “, he summarizes.

For its part, management recalls having granted an average increase of 3.5% at the start of the year and refers to the opening of negotiations, initially scheduled for January 2023, and advanced to mid-November in the current context of inflation. .

You may also like

Leave a Comment