UPDATE 3-Woodside says "constructively addressed" worker concerns as it seeks to avert strike

In This Article:

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Talks with unions to avoid strike action continues - CEO

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Company, unions to meet on Wednesday

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Woodside reported 4.2% jump in H1 profit

(Edits throughout, adds price impact paragraph 8, dates for Chevron strike ballots result paragraph 12)

By Praveen Menon and Renju Jose

SYDNEY, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Woodside Energy has "constructively addressed" several concerns of workers at Australia's largest liquefied natural gas facility, its CEO said on Tuesday, a day before crucial talks with unions aimed at averting any industrial action that could disrupt global supplies of the super-chilled fuel.

Australia is the world's biggest LNG exporter, and Woodside's North West Shelf, along with Chevron's Gorgon and Wheatstone projects, supply about one-tenth of the global market.

Unions representing the offshore platform workers at both companies are demanding better wages and conditions, and the threat of industrial action has driven global LNG prices higher.

On Wednesday, the unions will hold talks with Woodside's management about possible action. The overwhelming majority of workers at North West Shelf's offshore gas platforms have already notified Woodside that they may go on strike as early as Sept. 2.

"It takes two to tango," Woodside Chief Executive Meg O'Neill said in an interview with Reuters.

O'Neill said the company was "proceeding with goodwill and with respect" in its talks with the union, adding that it was "very focused on really understanding the key areas of concern".

"But we also of course, have a duty to our shareholders to be able to run the business," she said.

"I feel like we have kind of constructively addressed a number of their areas of concern," she added.

Worries that any action could disrupt LNG exports are supporting Asia spot LNG prices at above $14 per million British thermal units, two traders said. Dutch wholesale gas prices eased on Tuesday after the September contract settled sharply higher at 40 euros ($43.48) per megawatt hour (MWh) on Monday, Refinitiv Eikon data showed.

Woodside and its workers have been locked in a long-running dispute over pay and conditions at North West Shelf.

The Offshore Alliance (OA), which combines the Maritime Union of Australia and Australian Workers' Union, said in a Facebook post that it was time Woodside workers got their "fair share" of profits. "The OA members are primed and ready to go," the alliance added.

Some 99% of Woodside workers at North West Shelf's offshore gas platforms have granted unions permission to call a strike. Industrial action could range from short work stoppages and bans on certain tasks to an all-out strike.