TNE logo

Solidarity workers defiant as bailouts mount

Two decades after they helped overthrow communism in eastern Europe, shipyard workers in Poland's Solidarity are ready to fight for the right to share the subsidies that have bailed out businesses in the West

2009-06-12 | By TNE

Article tools

With their jobs at risk in a protracted dispute with Brussels over state aid, workers in the union that played a crucial role in the struggle for democracy feel angry and betrayed by their own government and the EU.

"The EU says it must protect European jobs - so why does it want us to close and to order ships from Asia?" said Roman Galezewski, head of the Solidarity branch at the sprawling Gdansk shipyard.

"There is a real will to fight here now... Shipyard workers here fought against tanks in the 1970s with their bare hands. You can't mess with people like this."

The workers now number about 3,000, down from 12,000 in Solidarity's heyday in the 1980s, and represent a fraction of the city's workforce. But their symbolic force is considerable.

Lech Walesa, the shipyard electrician who led Solidarity to victory in 1989 and became Poland's first post-communist president in 1990, recently appealed to the EU to save the Gdansk shipyard, saying it was part of Europe's heritage.

"Our people are furious with Brussels for subsidising some industries while forbidding aid to us," said Galezewski.

Strife has long dogged Poland's shipyards. The state aid that triggered the EU probes was the result of inefficient work practices at the yards, which have not made a profit on a single ship since 2004.

ISD Polska, a unit of Ukrainian group Donbass, bought a majority stake in the Gdansk shipyard in 2007, saving it from bankruptcy, but is now awaiting a European Commission ruling on whether more than €157m of aid paid to the yard over many years was illegal and must be repaid. Solidarity says the aid totalled only €6.7m.

Repaying aid
The Commission has already ordered the state-owned shipyards of nearby Gdynia and of Szczecin to repay billions of euros of aid. Those yards are now in the process of being sold to another investor, United International Trust.

Polish officials have suggested United International Trust represents a Gulf-based buyer, but neither the Trust nor ISD were available for comment on their plans for the Polish yards.

Politically, the timing is awkward. Poland's once-booming economy is slowing fast and Poles are also keenly aware that western European governments have been spending billions of euros of taxpayers' money to support banks and carmakers as the Commission stands by.

Warsaw has offered one-off pay cheques for shipyard workers who lose their jobs in the restructuring of firms and has also offered retraining to some. Solidarity, opposing any job losses, says employers should instead be recruiting more people to safeguard the future of shipbuilding. Galezewski was also dismissive of plans to retrain workers for an increasingly service-oriented economy.

"Which sector is now able to employ more people in such a crisis?" he said. "We will just spend money on creating new jobless. An unemployed welder or unemployed barber, it is the same thing."

Leave a comment

5 		stars5 stars5 stars5 stars5 stars
 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars
 3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars
 2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars
 1 star1 star1 star1 star1 star

Energy Articles

Also in this section

Oil turns focus back to tradition

While common sense might suggest the biggest oil companies should concentrate on the biggest undevel...Read more

Leading the charge

Society faces a critical challenge: Increasingly expensive fossil fuel reserves, which so many indiv...Read more

Sanctions tighten pressure on Iran's oil industry

A new round of US and European sanctions targets Iran's dilapidated oil sector from top to bottom, m...Read more

Australia on track to meet Kyoto target

Australia is on track to meet its greenhouse gas emissions target under the UN's Kyoto Protocol clim...Read more

Scientists examine causes for lull in warming

Climate scientists must do more to work out how exceptionally cold winters or a dip in world tempera...Read more

US stands out for climate-change skepticism

Many Americans are skeptical about global warming and that makes it harder to get a bill through Con...Read more

Lobbyists for US cap and trade face daunting task

The US Senate's stalled climate bill is getting a last big push from an unlikely ally - a group of e...Read more

US solar thermal firm in deal for China power project

US solar thermal power company eSolar, whose investors include Google Inc, said it has reached a dea...Read more

French nuclear deals need bespoke flavour

France could miss out on more multi-billion dollar deals to build new nuclear power plants unless it...Read more

Crunch time for the planet

Rich nations have to do more – a lot more – to slash their CO2 output. CCS technology can help, says...Read more

Seeing REDD

Accounting for more than half of the world's standing forest and 55 percent of Brazil's greenhouse g...Read more

A hub for energy

Niedersachsen, the German state up north, with Hanover as its capital, is the state of wind energy: ...Read more

Taking electric cars mainstream

Fundamental to the success of combating global climate change and reducing dependence on oil is chan...Read more

Waste not want not

The generation of electricity from WtE plants is often cited as an environmentally friendly and effe...Read more

An inseparable pair

Water and energy are critical to the world's expanding population, but what often is overlooked is t...Read more

A necessary technology

New CCS technology can now pipe carbon dioxide from coal and gas power stations to underground stora...Read more

Cracks in the market

It could save the rainforests of Borneo, slow climate change and the international community backs i...Read more

Taking on the challenge

Addressing climate change and moving toward a more sustainable environment have become every-day cha...Read more

A dim view

Red tape, a lack of political will and local opposition have cramped the development of an otherwise...Read more

A global effort

Steps by the Obama administration to recognise the harmful impact of industrial emissions on the pla...Read more

Eye on the future

Through one of the most severe global recessions in a generation, Anadarko Petroleum Corporation con...Read more

Wast(ing) water

Much of what we flush away can be converted into valuable resources, write Petter D. Jenssen and Ing...Read more

Water worries cloud future

With climate change concerns mounting and drought becoming more of a problem in many areas, the wate...Read more

Our energy future

The New Economy's Hywel Jones speaks with Fluor's Chairman & CEO Alan Boeckmann, Senior Group Pr...Read more

Developing solutions

Huw Thomas and Nick Williamson of Ashurst LLP take us through the ups and downs of small to medium s...Read more

Smoke and mirrors?

New geo-engineering proposals have to overcome wide criticism that they are fanciful and could have ...Read more

Leading the industry

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a very important technology for worldwide climate mitigation...Read more

It won't cost the Earth to save the planet

The earth's temperature is rising. Climate change affects every surface of the world; immediate acti...Read more

Virtual edition

In this issue, we list our 40 most innovative companies in the world and bring you the facts and figures from the latest developments making the news...
ECB independence, succession in question

ECB independence, succession in question

The European Central Bank's role in a $1trn emergency plan to stabilise the euro has raised doubts about its prized independence from political influence and cast uncertainty over its future leadership

US trade gap widens in March to $40.4bn

US trade gap widens in March to $40.4bn

The US trade deficit hit its widest point in more than a year in March, with a jump in imports swamping a rise in exports as the global economy strengthened, a government report shows

Are US regulators dropping the ball on biocrops?

Are US regulators dropping the ball on biocrops?

Robert Kremer, a US government microbiologist who studies Midwestern farm soil, has spent two decades analysing the rich dirt that yields billions of bushels of food each year and helps the US retain its title as breadbasket of the world

Report: NASA'S outdated labs jeopardise research

Report: NASA'S outdated labs jeopardise research

Many of NASA's research labs are old, and budget cuts have seriously jeopardised scientific research at the space agency, according to a National Research Council report