Title: Globalisation and the ICEM Strategy
1Globalisation and the ICEM Strategy
Viale Maestri del Lavoro 10, 10127, Turin Italy
Jim Catterson Director of Organization
2Globalisation
- 51 of the largest 100 economies in the world are
corporations. - Multinational companies hold ninety percent of
all technology and product patents worldwide. - Multinational companies are involved in 70
percent of world trade. More than thirty percent
of this trade is "intra- firm" in other words,
it occurs between units of the same corporation.
- The 300 largest corporations account for
one-quarter of the world's productive assets.
3Globalisation
- Over the last decade, global FDI has grown four
times as fast as GDP, and three times as fast as
trade. - 400 MNC's account for 50 per cent of global FDI
and 95 per cent originates in developed
countries. - The combined revenues of GM and Ford exceed the
combined GDP of all sub-Saharan Africa. - One fifth of the world's population live on a
dollar a day or less. - In the US the ratio of average CEO pay in Fortune
500 companies to the average factory worker has
risen from 42 to 1 in 1980 to 419 to 1.
4Globalisation
- Mergers Acquisitions
- Strategic Alliances
- Joint Ventures
- Foreign Direct Investment
- Global Sourcing
- Deregulation
5Globalisation
Cost-Cutting Impact
- Reduction of Workforce
- Redundancies
- Out-sourcing
- Replacing permanent workers with temporary
workers - Lowering Wages and Benefits
- Shifting Production to lower wage areas
6Oil Industry Consolidation
BP started the mega-merger wave in August 1998.
The Exxon-Mobil, BP Amoco-Arco and
TotalFinaElf-Elf Aquitaine mergers closely
followed. Combined, these deals totalled a
quarter of a trillion US dollars in value, and
raised the share of market cap held by the four
largest players (ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch/Shell,
BP, TotalFinaElf) by almost half. These three
super-majors ExxonMobil, Shell and BP have
combined sales greater than the total annual
domestic production (GDP) of the one billion
people of India. The merger of Conoco and
Phillips has created the largest refiner in the
US and the third-largest integrated US energy
company. Next the Russian Companies?
7Flat Glass Sales by Company 1998
8TOP 10 Global Market Share 1999
Total
Top 10
Chemical US 1,500 Bn US 180 Bn 12 Pharma.
US 338 Bn US 160 Bn 47
9TOP ETHYLENE PRODUCERS 2003
Mtpa
Company Capacity Global Market
Share
Dow/UCC Chemical 11.00 9.7 Exxon/Mobil
8.07 7.2 Shell 6.27 5.6 Equistar
5.11 4.5 SABIC 4.16 3.7 Chevron/Phillips
3.89 3.5 BP/Amoco 3.46 3.1 ElfTotalFina
2.99 2.7 Nova 2.96 2.6 Formosa Plastics
2.85 2.5 Total Top Ten 50.76 45.1
10Industrial Gases Market 2000
Company Sales (m.) Market Share ()
Air Liquide 5,863.54 17.15 BOC 4,826.17 14.1
1 Praxair 4,442.67 12.99 Air Products 3,466.00 1
0.13 Linde/Aga 3,447.84 10.08 NSC 2,072.49
6.06 Messer 1,579.89 4.62 Others 8,500.00 24.8
5 Total 34,198.62
11TOP 10 PHARMACEUTICAL COs
1988 1999 Merck 3.9 Glaxo/SKB 7.
0 Glaxo 2.9 Pfizer/Warner-Lambert 6.8 Ciba 2
.8 Merck 4.5 Hoechst 2.5 AstraZeneca 4.4
AHP 2,2 BMS 4.0 Bayer 2.2 Novartis 4
.0 J J 2.2 Aventis 3.9 SKB 2.1 J
J 3.8 Pfizer 2.1 AHP 3.1 Sandoz 2.0
Roche 3.0
12PULP AND PAPER INDUSTRY
TOP 10 companies represent 29 of world
production
13Global Tyre Industry
- Concentration Process
- 1995 80 of World Market is Covered by Top 9
Companies - 2005 80 of World Market is Covered by Top 3
Companies
14 Three Firms Dominate Global Tyre Market
15MINING BILLION DOLLAR DEALS
- WE ARE IN AN ERA OF UNPARALLELED CONSOLIDATION
- BRIAN GILBERTSON, CHAIRMAN, BILLITON
- OLIGOPOLIES DEVELOPING
- IRON ORE RIO TINTO, BHP, CVRD 80
- COAL
16Global Union Federation
Regional Offices Washington Rio de
Janeiro Johannesburg Seoul Moscow
Head Office Brussels Belgium
ICEM 382 affiliated trade unions 117 countries 20
million members
17Industries
- Energy (Electric Power, Oil, Gas)
- Mining Quarrying (Coal, other Mining)
- Chemical Bio-Science (Pharmaceuticals)
- Rubber (Tyre, Other Rubber)
- Materials (Glass, Ceramics, Cement)
- Pulp Paper
- Service and Miscellaneous
- Diamond (Gem, Ornament, Jewellery)
18Regions
- Asia / Pacific
- South and Central Africa
- North Africa and Middle East
- North America
- South and Central America the Caribbean
- Central Europe
- Eastern Europe, Central Asia and Trans-Caucasus
- Western Europe
- Nordic Countries
19ICEM Structure
- form ICEM Coordinating Committee
- are members of Regional Organisation
- send delegates to the Congress
Affiliates
Regional Organisation
- Elects
- Chair Person of Regional Organisation who is
nominated ICEM Vice President
- Elects
- President John Maitland, CFMEU, Australia
- General Secretary Fred Higgs
- Presidium (ICEM Vice Presidents)
- Countries for Executive Committee Members
- Auditing Committee
Congress
20ICEM Central Europe
- Regional Chairperson
- Seats on Executive Committee
- Regional Committee
- Regional Conference
- Regional Statutes
21ICEM Central European Regional Conference April
15-16, 2003 Kranjska Gora, Slovenia
22ICEM Central Europe
- ICEM South East Europe Project
- A Joint Project with IUF
- 1st year of 4 year program. 2nd stage
following 4 years of general training in the
region. - Zagreb office
- ICEM Balkan and SE Mediterranean Energy Network
23ICEM 1st World Conference for the Materials
Industries Section
Slovenia June 20-22, 2001
24(No Transcript)
25Heidelberger
Holcim (Holderbank)
Lafarge
Seament
Titan Cement
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27- ICEM and EMCEF
- Cooperation
- Jurisdictions
- Relationships (eg ETUC ICFTU TUAC)
- Expertise
28EMCEF SEMINAR EU ACCESSION Kranjska Gora,
Slovenia April 14, 2003
Jim Catterson ICEM Director of Organization
29GDP per head Bulgaria 24 of EU
average Estonia 38 Poland 39 Hungary 52
30Bargaining coverage rates and unionisation rates
in candidate countries () Country Coverage rate
of collective agreements Unionisation
rate Czech Republic 25-30 30 Hungary 4
5-50 20 Poland 15 Slovakia 50 4
0 Slovenia Almost total 41.3
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333rd ICEM World Congress, Stavanger August 28-30,
2003
34Recognition
- Recognition an important issue for ICEM, as
for any trade union organisation Recognition has
been achieved in 3 ways - In negotiating and achieving Global Agreements
- When companies enter into dialog following
representation - by the ICEM on behalf of an affiliate
- When companies or employer organisations seek our
view on issues effecting ICEM sectors
35ICEM Congress, Durban 3-5 November 1999
UNITE and ORGANISE
36The ICEM needs to operate more like an
international trade union and not just a service
organization Fred Higgs ICEM General Secretary
37ICEM Future Work Plan
- Unite and Organise
- Global Trade Union Networks
- Dialog with Multinational Companies
- Global Agreements with Multinational Companies
- Global Solidarity
38Global Trade Union Networks
39Global Trade Union Networks
- Exchange of Information Experiences
- Collective Agreements
- wages
- working hours
- shift systems
- bonus systems
- holidays
- retirement schemes
- Occupational Health, Safety Environment
- Microeconomic data
40Global Trade Union Networks
- Organizing International Solidarity
- Representative Structure
- country
- region
- worldwide
- Dialog with Central Management
41ICEM Global company networks in existence
- Rio Tinto (administered by CFMEU, Australia)
- Goodyear (administered by USWA, USA)
- Bridgestone (administered by GOMU-RENGO, Japan)
- Novartis (administered by SIB, Switzerland)
- International Paper (PACE, USA)
- Endesa (FIA-UGT/FM-CC.OO., Spain)
- BASF (IGBCE, Germany)
- Exxon Mobil (PACE USA)
42Prerequisites to forming an ICEM Network
- An affiliate must take responsibility for
carrying - out and providing resources for the
administration. - The main activities must be resourced by the
- network participants.
- Global gatherings are not essential
- to a successful network.
43Global Agreements with Multinational Companies
44 Priority activity agreed at our last 2
Congresses to negotiate global agreements The
objective of such agreements- To establish a
set of principles / standards which a
multinational company will apply wherever it
operates in the world. Regardless of whether it
is required to do so by national law
45Global Framework Agreements
- ICEM Congress, Presidium and Executive
- Committees given mandate on issues to be covered
-
- Human Trade Union Rights,
- Health Safety and Environment,
- Other issues not normally subject to local or
- national collective bargaining.
46Global Framework Agreements
- The Congress, Presidium and Executive Committees
have developed - the following process for securing such
agreements - Prioritise companies with a strong union base in
their home country - First approach to companies normally made by
affiliates in the company's home country - Try to improve provisions within each new
agreement - All agreements to be subject to annual review
47- ICEM Global Agreements
- Statoil July 1998, March 2001, August 2003
- Freudenberg June 2000
- Endesa January 2002
- Norske Skog June 2002
- Anglogold September 2002
- ENI November 2002
-
48Content of Global Agreements
To secure a continuous improvement and
development of good working relations and to
establish an open information channel between
ICEM, its Affiliates and the Management.
49Content of Global Agreements
- Right to every employee to be represented by a
union of his/her own choice right to basic
trade union rights (ILO 87, 98) company agrees
not to oppose efforts to unionize its employees - To employ no force or bonded labour (ILO 29, 105)
50Content of Global Agreements
- To employ no child labour (ILO 138)
- To exercise equality of opportunity treatment
in employment (ILO 100, 111) - To pay fair wages benefits according to good
industry standards in the country concerned - To provide a safe work environment, deploying
common best practice standards
51Content of Global Agreements
- Monitoring
- Training
- Information Exchange
- Regular Consultations
52Lock-out ends at Crown Petroleum
53Crown Central Petroleum Pasadena Texas
- January 17, 2001 five-year lockout defeated by
PACE Local 4-227 at - Texas oil refinery
- Campaign Actions
- A consumer boycott was carried out in seven
states and the District of Columbia. - The company received a 1.1 million air pollution
fine from the Texas National - Resource Conservation Commission.
- Widespread support came from the rest of the
labour movement, civil rights - and religious organizations, and environmental
activists
54Crown Central Petroleum Pasadena Texas
- Campaign Actions (continued)
- PACE waged a sophisticated shareholder campaign
to block Crown CEO - Henry Rosenberg from acquiring the company.
- In October 2000, Statoil, cancelled its contract
for the processing of Statoil's crude - oil at Crown's Pasadena refinery. This single
contract used 35 percent of the - Pasadena refinery's capacity and its cancellation
was a powerful blow to the company. - Lars Myhre, chairman of the ICEM's Energy
Industries Section visited the PACE - picket line at the Pasadena refinery
55ICEM STATOIL AGREEMENT
- Extracts from Statoil report to the Global
Compact Learning Forum, October 29-30, 2001
London. - Implementation of the agreement has so far
covered - Meetings to discuss specific challenges in
Statoil's international - portfolio
- Training, eg. Statoil's participation in ICEM's
training of trade union - representatives from SOCAR in Azerbaijan
- Consultations whereby Statoil has contributed
to the resolution of - labour disputes
- Mutual support Statoil attended ICEM World
Congress in 1999, - ICEM attended the Scandinavian (sub-)group of
Global Compact - convened by Statoil.
56ICEM STATOIL AGREEMENT
As far as Statoil is concerned, the agreement
with ICEM can contribute to improved risk
management by way of increased insight into the
causes of labour disputes and how to resolve
them. Statoil will enhance its reputation as a
socially responsible company by becoming better
at managing labour relations. It is important
that labour relations are managed in accordance
with local conditions. Considerations of
legitimacy and efficiency require that employee
concerns should be handled by those closest to
the issues. We believe that the ICEM agreement
will help us address this requirement without
interfering with established local practices.
Statoil report to the Global Compact Learning
Forum, October 29-30, 2001 London.
57A Global Agreement is not a Code of Conduct
- Negotiated not unilateral
- Monitored by the organized workforce
- Network can develop to be an enforcement
procedure
58Global Compact Basis for New Agreements ?
Rio Tinto Anglogold Shell BP Endesa ...
59Global Compact
- Kofi Annan first tabled the GC initiative January
1999, - (launched in 2000)
- Voluntary initiative creating a partnership
between the UN, - International Corporations, Labour, Civil
Society and National - Governments
- Calls on corporations to adopt a set of nine
principles to guide - their worldwide business practices.
60What Are The 9 Principles?
- Human Rights
- Business should support and respect the
protection of internationally proclaimed human
rights within their sphere of influence. - Make sure they are not complicit in human rights
abuses.
61What Are The 9 Principles?
- Labour
- 3 Businesses should uphold freedom of
association and the effective recognition of the
right to collective bargaining. - 4 The elimination of all forms of forced and
compulsory Labour. - 5 The effective abolition of child Labour
- 6 Eliminate discrimination in respect of
employment and occupation.
62What Are The 9 Principles?
- Environment
- 7 Businesses should support a precautionary
approach to environmental challenges - 8 Undertake initiatives to promote greater
environmental responsibility - 9 Encourage the development and diffusion of
environmental friendly technologies.
63International Trade Union Response
- The ICFTU was involved in the development of this
initiative and are supportive. - The ICEM also supports the initiative and is
involved with the U.N. and the ICFTU in its
further development. Fred Higgs is one of two
Trade Union Members of the Advisory Council
64Making it Meaningful
- Companies should not just make grand statements
- Should ensure there is commitment at all
managerial levels to applying the 9 principles - Involve all employees and their unions
- Underpin company commitment with a Global
Agreement with the relevant Global Union
Federation (GUF)
65- Solidarity Actions
- Workers and their unions continue to face
problems at national and local level - Increasingly the solutions will be found at
international level
66Binda Panday Nepal August 29, 2003 elected ICEM
Vice-President Stavanger September 5 arrested
with other trade unionists Katmandhu Nepal
67June 2002 After International support Canadian
Strikers at Lafarge win a six-month strike
against the cement multinational
68January 2002 Global labour campaign helps force
Saint-Gobain to Recognise UAW in the United
States Struggle for a 1ST Contract Continues
69New Zealand EPMU international pressure through
ICEM IP Networkends 82 day strike June
2003 Kinleith
70Rhodia UK September 2003 GMB Amicus-MSF Rolling
Strikes to safeguard future pensions
71THE FUTURE
-
- More global agreements
- Increased use of ICEM multinational union
networks to ensure that global agreements are
working and are monitored effectively - Hot-line communications between ICEM leadership
and MNCs in order to identify and respond to
major issues before they become international
problems - Development of better links with employers
organisations in the various ICEM sectors -
72Solidarity Works !
Jim Catterson November 2003