Consumables
Salaried employees will begin strike at UPM in Finland
Tuesday 05. April 2011 - Repeated strikes will shift orders permanently from the Finnish production units to other locations
Tomorrow, on 6 April at 6:00 Finnish time, the salaried employees have announced to begin a two-week strike which would affect the majority of UPMs operations in Finland. The strike does not include UPMs mechanical forest industry, that is, Plywood, Timber and UPM ProFi businesses, UPMs forestry specialists, senior salaried employees, nor salaried employees of other forestry companies in Finland. At UPM, there are around 1,300 salaried employees working, among others, within the supply chain, and finance and HR in Finland.
“At this stage it is impossible to estimate the exact impacts of the strike but even a conservative estimate of the damage would be given in millions of euros. When the strike begins, we most probably must start to running down paper mills already within a couple of days,” says Jyrki Ovaska, President of UPMs Paper Business Group.
“The continuous disturbances on the labour market damage Finlands reputation and the repeated strikes will shift orders permanently to other locations from the Finnish production units. Industrial actions targeted towards only one company represent negotiation tactics which have unreasonable consequences to customers, the company and also to all of the companys employees.
“In recent years, UPM has centralised its global administration services in a service centre in Tampere, Finland. If there is repeated uncertainty in our operations in Finland, we must evaluate whether we our operations in Finland are in right proportions or whether we have to start to steer our operations to countries, where the risk of strike is lower,” says Ovaska.
Conciliation lead by the conciliator general was ended unsettled yesterday. For the time being the conciliator general has not invited the parties to further conciliation. The Finnish Forest Industries Federation (FFIF) and trade union Pro have negotiated on salaries and labour contract during the beginning of the year. In the negotiations led by the conciliator general, Pro has required a 3.5 percent rise in salary and transfer into an old-fashioned compensation system, which does not match the needs of todays labour market. The FFIF considers the salary request oversized in comparison to the other wage settlements completed this spring.