760 jobs to go at FG Wilson

Published Thursday, 13 September 2012
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Engineering company and major Northern Ireland employer FG Wilson has announced the loss of 760 jobs.

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    Job losses at FG Wilson
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The redundancies will be made across each of the four Northern Ireland facilities - Larne, Belfast, Springvale and Monkstown.

The firm is moving production of its 400 series generator sets to Tianjin, China, to build the product closer to its growing customer base.

The announcement was made on Thursday by Caterpillar Inc. on behalf of FG Wilson, its wholly owned subsidiary, and it came as First Minister Peter Robinson and deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness headed a mini summit to discuss the worsening economy and Northern Ireland's unemployment rate of 8.2%.

The firm said they had made "a number of measures that will result in a more efficient and competitive business model."

Caterpillar Inc. said they were reviewing strategies to "improve its competitiveness."

"In addition, it is responding to dampened demand from Caterpillar's small generator set customers as a result of the ongoing Eurozone problems and the continuing financial uncertainty in the global economy.

"As a result of the evaluation of the small generator set business, announced in June, and adjusting production levels to better align with demand, Caterpillar is releasing up to approximately 760 people - a combination of salaried and production employees, as well as agency workers.

"To date approximately 170 agency workers included in that total have been released."

Robert Kennedy, Northern Ireland Operations Director, said: "We value our employees' contributions, and these actions are not a reflection of them, but rather of the business climate."

"We understand these decisions will be difficult for the lives of many of our workers and their families, and we genuinely regret that."

He continued: "We realise the announcements we're making affect a company that has a rich history in Northern Ireland.

"However, given our current structure and economic environment, portions of our portfolio are not competitive, and we need to react accordingly for long-term growth and to compete for industry leadership."

Mr Kennedy said that Caterpillar is committed to building the remaining business in Northern Ireland and to working closely with local government.

Alliance MLA Stewart Dickson has called on the Prime Minister to visit Northern Ireland immediately to address what is now a national economic blow.

The East Antrim politician has expressed his shock and sadness at the major job loss announcement.

"This is shocking news that will devastate many workers and their families. Many more will also be affected by the fall out, as job losses to this extent will have a knock-on effect on secondary companies and groups in the area."

He continued:"The landscape of Larne and Monkstown will be drastically altered forever, making this a national economic disaster."

"I am calling for the Prime Minister to meet with the Enterprise, Trade and Investment Minister immediately to ensure the correct support system is in place for all affected.

"He really should be in Northern Ireland today as local people try to come to terms with this news.

"These job loses clearly show how unstable the UK's economy remains. The Prime Minister and the Executive must act fast to stop other firms suffering the same fate."

Enterprise Minister Arlene Foster described the job losses as "a major blow to the Northern Ireland economy."

"This is devastating news for the hundreds of families who will be affected, particularly when so many people are already struggling in this difficult economic climate.

"I want to assure staff that, together with Invest NI and colleagues in the entire Northern Ireland Executive, we will do all that is possible to limit the impact of the redundancies," the Minister said.

Meanwhile, Unite the Union has reacted angrily to the news.

The union's regional secretary Jimmy Kelly, said: "The high-calibre job losses are a crushing blow to the East Antrim area and Northern Ireland.

"The company has not given its workers or their union representatives the opportunity to negotiate a plan which would have attempted to keep some of the affected workers employed," he claimed.

"Unite is still willing to sit down with the management and seek a way forward. The union and is calling these redundancies to be put on hold to see if we can at least find a way to reduce the number of job losses."

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34 Comments
ex fg wilson in belfast wrote (249 days ago):
i worked for fg wilson for 10 years and made redundant in 2009 and new it was only a matter of time before the company pulled out of northern ireland,they dont care about their workers one bit nore does the goverment as was told there would be things in place to help me retrain and get into work again as quick as possible but there was nothing it was all talk,i was told that the government was focused on getting young men into work and there is nothing for me at the age of 40 so just threw to the side,i cant get any help for work its i joke,i think northern ireland is in a realy bad state and only get worse,are government are a joke as long as their high paid jobs are safe,its time the HOUSE ON THE HILL pulled the finger out and sort this country out before the point of no return which is as close as iv ever seen,the rich are getting richer on the back of the blood sweat tears of the working man only to dump them when the going gets tough,YOU ARE ONLY A NUMBER TO THEM,they dont care what happens the day you walk out the factory for last time,this government task force is a media stunt sure look how long Peter Robinson took to make any kind of statement,these men and women end up on the pile of 1000s of people left to deal with a country quickly goin down the drain as there is not the jobs out there for them and the wages if you do find work is £6.08 for skilled work,WE ARE ALL SLAVES TO MONEY TILL WE DIE
Andy in Belfast wrote (250 days ago):
I'm an employee in the company and have listened to the directors in CAT EPD talk about protecting their assets (THEY STATED THAT PEOPLE ARE THEIR PRIMARY ASSET)- They claimed that we are vital to the 2020 vision - Now they show their true path which is to follow the DOLLAR and discard the employee's who have served them for so long.The redundancy package that was offered is a joke. Next step is to shut Springvale and Monkstown and save on costs and centralise all future work in Larne.
Ryan in Belfast wrote (250 days ago):
Its just economic sense for a company to move to where its going to be cheaper, i mean the wage you pay someone in NI could pay the wages of say around 5 people or more in China. We have to be more competitive so that companies choose to stay and invest in NI and the first step is to cut the corporation tax rate. It makes no sense at all to lower worker wages in NI because that just makes living standards drop but we have to bring in a better work ethic mentality amongst workers. My chief concern is for the welfare of workers, not the rich at the top but we do have to make some fundmental changes to our workforce and economy here in Northern Ireland.
Noel jones in Ireland wrote (251 days ago):
Fgwilson will be closed within 2 years it is caterpillars plan to take this highly profitable business to a lower paying economy china first then India then Africa the writing is unfortunately on the wall for fg Wilson and there is nothing which can be done about it the volentary package which has been given is terrible just the standard with a few extra weeks through in. This from a company with record breaking profits sad.
fra in belfast wrote (251 days ago):
not nice at all to lose your job i myself lost mine 2 years ago i was 1 of the thousands in the building industry who lost thier job no emergency meetings at stormount or anywere is a matter of fact fg wilson redundancy is a drop in the ocean compared to building industry
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