Grains shipments out
of Argentine ports are normalizing after the government ordered workers to
suspend a nearly week-long strike earlier on Monday, the head of the nation’s
ports chamber said.
The government sent an
order to two oilseed workers unions to suspend a strike for 15 days. So far,
one union has said it will comply with the order.
The strike kicked off last
Tuesday 6 August and had paralyzed exports from the
nation’s topgrain ports as workers demanded their salaries stay ahead of
high inflation.“Once conciliation
has been ordered, the terminals call in their employees and they get back to
work according to their scheduled shifts,” ports chamber director Guillermo
Wade told Reuters.
The San Lorenzo
Department Oilseed Workers and Employees Union earlier said that it had received the government order
and would comply with calls for mandatory talks.
“We abide by the reconciliation
(talks). Little by little and in an orderly manner we will lift the measure,”
said Martin Morales, secretary for the union, referring to the strike.
The Federation of
Oilseed Industry Workers, the other union on strike, did not immediately reply
to a request for comment.
Unions previously said
that they had failed to hear from grains producers to negotiate. Morales
added that an initial meeting between the parties was scheduled for Wednesday
at 11 a.m. local time (1400 GMT).
The oilseed industry
chamber said in a statement that it had requested government
intervention, citing the economic impact of the strike and
stalled talks with the unions.The
strike mainly affected terminals located north of Rosario along the Parana
River, where more than 80% of Argentina’s agricultural and agro-industrial
exports are shipped.More than 40 ships were delayed by the strike,
according to the Rosario grains exchange.
Argentina is a major grains producer and
is a top exporter of soybean oil and soybean meal.