2008 September 3   06:23

Panama ports strike ends

Workers have ended a strike at two major ports at opposite ends of the Panama Canal and canal authorities said the day-long walkout did not noticably disrupt shipping through the waterway.
Crane operators and harbour towage workers at Balboa and Cristobal ports walked out in the morning, but union leader Luis Carlos Fruto said they later agreed to return to work after the government offered to help resolve a disagreement over pay for shift work.
"We have asked the labour ministry to arbitrate. Because of this, the strike has ended," Fruto told Reuters.
The labour ministry welcomed the swift end to the strike, saying prolonged action could have been "very negative" for the economy and for expansion work on the canal.
Shipping firms said earlier that roughly two-thirds of crane operators in Balboa and Cristobal ports were absent, leaving a backlog in loading and unloading containers.
Around 5% of global trade passes through the Panama canal, shipping everything from Chinese-made electronic goods to European farm produce, and the waterway accounts for a fifth of Panama's gross domestic product.
Some 60 harbour towage workers joined the strike, and the small number of tow boats operating could not match demand, shipping agents said. Ships cannot enter port unless they are guided in by tow boats, and the towage strike hit all types of cargo including non-containerised grains and commodities.
The Panama Canal Authority, which neither owns nor runs the ports at its Pacific and Atlantic mouths, said the strike had not held up traffic through the inter-oceanic waterway.
"There currently is not a backlog at the Panama Canal. Ship levels are normal," a spokesperson said.
The ports, run by Hong Kong's Hutchison Whampoa, are used by shipping giants like Denmark's A.P. Moller-Maersk for loading and unloading cargo and maintenance.
Balboa, on the Pacific coast, is one of Latin America's biggest ports. Cristobal is one of a handful of ports on the Atlantic end of the canal and heavily used by container ships.
An official at the company operating the crane concession, a division of Amsterdam-based Smit Internationale, said around 30% of crane operators worked on Wednesday (NZT).

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