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BHP Electrical workers support strikes at key Australian Iron Ore Export Hub

The Electrical Trades Union said that electrical workers at BHP’s Port Hedland Bulk Port Terminal voted overwhelmingly in favor of a work stoppage following four months targeted work bans.

The Australian union reported that 97.5% percent of high-voltage workers supported work stops in a poll asking if they would support an unlimited number of stoppages lasting from 30 minutes to 24 hours.

The union stated that the 'high-voltage electric workers maintain an electrical network which keeps BHP mine sites, worker accommodations, and Newman nearby, running.

The union announced in May that workers would vote to stop work after six months of unsuccessful talks with the?management.

Adam Woodage, Secretary of the Electrical Trades Union WA, said: "Like Port Hedland workers, they want fair and transparent classifica-tions, equal pay for equally hard work, and conditions that can't be changed by a manager at their whim."

BHP has not responded to the request for comment immediately.

After failing to agree on the terms of a four-year labour agreement, hundreds of BHP iron ore workers at Port Hedland held an eight-hour strike on Thursday.

Port Hedland, a major artery for BHP, is where it routes $80 million worth of iron ore every day. This action was the biggest at BHP in at least three decades as unions try to gain a foothold in Australia's Iron Ore Regions.

(source: Reuters)