Oil workers union chief Saif al-Qahtani says production is partially halted without clarifying which sites had been affected. | |||||
KUWAIT
CITY - Thousands of Kuwait's oil workers began an open-ended strike on
Sunday to protest plans to cut their wages, action which saw the
emirate's crude production plunge.
A spokesman for the
Kuwait Oil Co. (KOC) Saad al-Azemi said on Twitter that "average
production reached 1.1 million" barrels in Kuwait on Sunday.
Daily production in Kuwait, OPEC's fourth largest producer, is normally around 3.0 million barrels per day.
Azemi
also said natural gas production was at 620 million cubic feet, down
from Kuwait's daily average of over 1.3 billion cubic feet.
The strike comes as world oil producers gather in Qatar to negotiate an output freeze to boost prices.
"Thousands
of workers began their strike," the oil workers union chief Saif
al-Qahtani said, adding that production was partially halted without
clarifying which sites had been affected.
"Observed since 7:00 am (0400 GMT), this open-ended strike will continue until the workers' demands are met," Qahtani said.
On Saturday, the union turned down an appeal from Kuwait's acting oil minister, Anas al-Saleh, to call off the strike.
Hit
by the sharp drop in crude prices on world markets, Kuwait is
introducing a new payroll scheme for all public employees and wants to
include the country's 20,000 oil workers, which would mean an automatic
cut in wages and incentives.
As the strike began,
Kuwait Petroleum Corp spokesman Sheikh Talal Khaled al-Sabah said that
the national oil conglomerate had activated an "emergency plan" to
ensure that local and international markets were not affected by the
walkout.
"Export operations are going ahead as planned
and (KPC) is capable of responding to major international market
demands, based on agreements with clients," he said in a statement
published on the KUNA news site.
The plan ensures that
all petrol stations will continue to be supplied as well as Kuwait's
international airport and companies operating at the facility, he said.
He
urged Kuwaitis "not to listen to rumours that the strike has affected
the needs of the local market," adding that Kuwait's "reserves of
gasoline and petrol derivatives is enough to meet the country's demands
for 25 days and strategic reserves could suffice for 31 more days."
KPC
had offered to suspend all spending cuts if the union agreed to join a
committee to negotiate a settlement but said that workers had boycotted
negotiations called for Thursday by the social affairs and labour
ministry.
The union is also protesting plans to privatise parts of the oil sector.
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Monday, 18 April 2016
Open-ended strike of Kuwait oil workers slashes output
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Middle-East-Online
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