90
seconds at 9 am: Chinese slump (news with Bernard Hickey)
More on the collapse of coal mining in New Zealand....
West
Coast mining 'hanging by a thread'
A
plan to cut hundreds of jobs and the suspension of operations at
Spring Creek mine has left uncertainty in the already battered West
Coast community
TVNZ,
30
August, 2012
Solid
Energy announced yesterday it would suspend operations at the mine,
which has the potential to affect about 400 workers around the
country.
Grey
District Mayor Tony Kokshoorn told TV ONE's Breakfast this morning
the community was "hanging by a thread", with the
announcement following years of struggle for the mining industry.
"It's
been a tough three of four years with the recession, coal prices
dropping and the Pike River explosion."
More
than 250 staff at Spring Creek Mine have been suspended while their
fates are decided.
Sixty-three
jobs are also expected to go at Huntly East Mine while another 77 are
to go from other areas of the business, including at head office in
Christchurch.
Two
months ago, Solid Energy chief executive Don Elder and chairman John
Palmer met with mine workers to tell them development of Spring Creek
mine would go ahead as well as the development of the new Liverpool
mine in Greymouth.
West
Coast MP Damien O'Connor said before the announcement it seemed as if
uncertainty within the industry had gone.
"We
thought we had got over that and were looking to a sustainable
prosperous future."
Solid
Energy is one of four energy companies in the Government's partial
assets programme, and O'Connor said the cut backs were about
repositioning the company for sale.
"The
Government is determined to sell down half of Solid Energy," he
said.
"The
company has to cut back all its costs, make the company look rosy on
the books, and make sure it has a big amount of coal in reserve so it
can offer a good deal to prospective investors."
O'Connor
said even though the suspension was a temporary adjustment, it meant
people would be forced to seek jobs in Australia.
"Miners
will pack their bags and go to Australia and that will be bad for our
region and the country.
"The
Government is saying this is the way to save the economy, yet this is
taking a real hit and we could lose a huge number of valuable and
skilled employees."
Kokshoorn
said the community would not give up hope until Solid Energy
finalised the deal with "redundancy cheques in the mail".
"We
are appealing to Solid Energy to have a hard look at the situation.
We are saying don't take a knee-jerk reaction by drastically cutting
jobs."
"At
Spring Creek at the moment they only need another $70 million to
develop the block, then they'll get a lot of coal out of it,"
said Kokshoorn
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