June 26, 2008
Source: The Journal of Commerce Online
Marseilles and Le
Havre, France's largest ports, are at a standstill Thursday
as dockworkers stage a 24-hour strike one day after the French
Parliament approved the government’s port reform bill.
Dockworkers at the northwestern port of Nantes-Saint Nazaire
also worked off the job, sparking fears of a major escalation
of a campaign of strikes that has crippled oil and container
traffic.
The National Assembly, or Parliament, voted 298-186 in favor
of a bill that will significantly erode the state’s influence
in the operation of seven public ports, including Marseilles
and Le Havre, to improve their competitiveness, especially in
container handling.
The CGT dockworkers union warned of further protests if the
government of President Nicolas Sarkozy does not show flexibility
over its plan to privatize container-handling at the seven ports.
Paris has set an Oct. 31 deadline for port authorities, unions
and stevedores to reach agreement on how to transfer around
2,000 container crane operators from port payrolls to private
terminal operators.
Le Havre and Marseilles have suffered a significant decline
in container traffic since the strikes began in mid-April and
are bracing for a further loss of business next week when the
17 member carriers of the Far Eastern Freight Conference impose
a $250-per-TEU congestion surcharge on the two ports.
Le Havre has lost a third of its box traffic, and at least 80,000
TEUs has been diverted from Marseilles to other Mediterranean
ports.
The government claims the reforms will create 30,000 new jobs
and boost annual box traffic from 3.6 million TEUs in 2007 to
10 million TEUS in 2015.
By: Bruce Barnard



