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NOPEF Seeks Harmonisation of Norwegian Oil Contracts by Striking Service Companies

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26 June, 2006

The refusal by oil service companies doing business in Norway’s oil patch to harmonise a national agreement with other collective agreements in the oil industry has caused selective strikes. The strikes began on 21 June by ICEM affiliate NOPEF, and threaten to disrupt North Sea oil production, as well as impacting development and well maintenance work.

NOPEF called 87 workers out on strike after arbitration between the union and the Oil Industry Association (OLF) failed on 20 June to achieve a new two-year pay deal. The oil service companies struck include Halliburton, Baker Hughes, Schlumberger, Weatherford and Oceaneering. The companies affected primarily maintain wells, aid new drilling exploration, and assist drilling production operations in the North Sea.


NOPEF's Lars Myhre

NOPEF is seeking to harmonise the oil service agreement with other national agreements covering testing, drilling, tug-piloting, catering and other operational areas, agreements that already have common working conditions. “Oil service companies do not want staff on regular weekly schedules and regular rotations,” said NOPEF’s Lars Myhre, ICEM’s Energy Section chairman, adding, “They are only interested in their own flexibility demands.”