HomeArchives → by date → June 2003 → June 24 →
HomeArchives → by subject → Endangered Machinery

35 Hour Week in the East, Chinese traces in the West

<< Previous Entry | Next Entry>>

35_hours_now_small.jpg
CLICK TO ENLARGE
Chinese traces in a former Dortmund steel mill, 2003: "Packing firma (company)" - in the lower left corner, a union sticker saying "Steel Round (Bargaining) 1990: It's our turn now - (We demand) 10% pay rise and the 35 hour week"


china_first_small.jpg
CLICK TO ENLARGE
Chinese traces in a former Dortmund steel mill, 2003: "China First"


35_hours_east_small.gif
CLICK TO ENLARGE
Union sticker 2003: "35 hour week: In the East, the sun is rising"


Now that East German workers in the metal/automotive industries are on strike to fight for reduced weekly work times (and risk basically everything that has been reached there so far), the above photos come to my mind. I took them just days ago right here in Dortmund where I live, in the now dismantled Westfalenhütte steel mill, once the city's largest employer. Dismantled? Packing company? The entire plant has been knocked down and shipped to China.

After its closure early in 2001, Chinese steel company Shagang purchased all the facilities shut down by ThyssenKrupp Stahl, read, everything you need to produce hot rolled steel: a sinter plant, blast furnaces and the hot strip mill from the Westfalenhütte and the oxygen furnace steel works from the Phoenix plant. Everything got dismantled, knocked down into handy parts, packed into wooden crates and shipped across the seas to somewhere near Shanghai, where the reinstalled facilities will produce 4 million tons of rolled steel for the domestic market, substituting imports. And now, Shagang hit the jackpot and bought the missing link: the Kaiserstuhl coking plant. Situated right in the center of the Westfalenhütte area, commissioned in 1992 and decommissioned just years later, this 1.5 billion Marks plant is the cherry on the Shagang shopping tour cake.

And in Eastern Germany, workers are on strike because two blockhead union leaders claim that their plants are "now competitive enough" to introduce the 35 hour week that is standard in many industries in the Western part. Mr Düvel and Mr Peters don't make too many friends with their course, even not among workers and workers' councils - no wonder, in an area with 20% unemployment rate where the new automotive plants and their suppliers basically are everything they have.

Comments

Comments are closed at the moment. I will post a blog entry as soon as they are available again.

-->

Tools

Recent Comments

Guido Albers on Common Questions (I) at 2006-09-18 19:40
Guido Albers on Common Questions (I) at 2006-09-18 19:39
Sean Roach on World Champion at 2006-09-18 18:52
Frank Kanzler on RSS Feed Reader / News Aggregators Directory at 2006-09-18 15:11
Walter Rafelsberger on Mapping and Visualization Resources at 2006-09-18 03:54
Pieter on Hunters, after all, aren't cooks at 2006-09-14 19:26
Haiko Hebig on Pentax K10D announced (Updated) at 2006-09-13 22:25
Pieter on Pentax K10D announced (Updated) at 2006-09-13 20:04
Donald L Pevsner on Concorde Retirement Update at 2006-09-06 21:01
John Best on RSS Feed Reader / News Aggregators Directory at 2006-08-19 17:49
Titov Denis on RSS Feed Reader / News Aggregators Directory at 2006-08-17 11:20
Haiko Hebig on WASP - Wild Child at 2006-08-07 10:14
Guido Albers on WASP - Wild Child at 2006-08-06 09:43
Frank Wenger on RSS Feed Reader / News Aggregators Directory at 2006-08-04 14:22
Hemaworstje on Spare Part at 2006-08-01 03:55
T.Reader on RSS Feed Reader / News Aggregators Directory at 2006-07-29 09:27
ניו יורק on General Blumenthal Coal at 2006-07-28 22:50
Moritz on "Zwar haben einige Genossen die Dinge zu einseitig gesehen, aber ..." at 2006-07-14 12:12
Pieterjan Lansbergen on Nothing better than a Hill Climb in the Morning at 2006-07-13 20:33
at on Es muss schließlich alles seine Ordnung haben at 2006-07-12 11:33