Unite fears Kraft will pay for Cadbury bid with workers' jobs

30 November 2009

Unite, the leading union in the food industry, says it is growing increasingly concerned that US-based transnational Kraft will pay for its bid for Cadbury with massive job losses in the UK and Ireland. 

The concerns are set out in a letter to Kraft's chief executive, Irene Rosenfeld, and follow a recent meeting between the union and the company where Kraft failed to give any guarantees in relation to the chocolate makers' workforce. 

With analysts predicting that Kraft will be seeking to generate up to $1 billion in savings through mass redundancies and restructuring, Unite says Kraft must give commitments on a set of minimum employment protections, including no compulsory redundancies and protections for the workers' terms and pensions.  The union is also pushing Kraft to be more explicit about its intentions towards the Somerdale site, which is set to close early in 2010, as it fears that the absence of clarity is allowing mis-placed hopes to build that Kraft's takeover would save jobs at the site.

The union also makes it clear in the letter that it cannot accept Kraft's explanation that a lack of information about Cadbury is behind its reluctance to be more explicit about its plans.

Writing to Irene Rosenfled, Jennie Formby, the union's national officer for the food sector, says: "Cadbury is a successful, profitable company that provides high quality jobs for over 6,000 employees in the UK and Ireland, and to date nothing has been said by Kraft to allay the concerns that we have about the potential threat to jobs and conditions should a takeover bid be successful. 

"While Kraft representatives expressed a willingness to engage in discussion and to try to allay the fears of our members in Cadbury, they stated that they were unable to give any guarantees either about jobs or conditions, or about the future of Somerdale, as Kraft is unable to get sufficient information from Cadbury as a result of the status of the bid as hostile.

"I have to say that I can not accept this; you clearly have enough information to persuade you to make a bid worth £10 billion and, as we pointed out in the meeting, in the context of the overall bid the assurances we are seeking are not a major commitment on the part of Kraft.

"Our major concern is to understand how you would achieve the quoted savings of $625million (which some analysts believe will need to rise to as much as £1.5billion) without significant restructuring involving the loss of jobs and sites. 

"While your representatives said they had a commitment to maintain manufacturing in the UK, they were unable to give us any reassurance over Ireland – or indeed for Kraft members in Europe – and regarding Somerdale could only say that they have an ‘intention to maintain a manufacturing facility’ in Somerdale with no stated intention to preserve any jobs for the existing workforce."

Unite says it also wants Kraft to be much clearer in terms of its plans to invest in all sites in the UK and Ireland, and for details of the business plans for the combined company as a whole.

The union says it will continue to engage in discussion with Kraft and any other company who may mount a bid, and is shortly to launch its Keep Cadbury Independent campaign to win security in any takeover for workers in the UK and Ireland. 

ENDS

For further information, please contact Pauline Doyle on 07976 832 861

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