Australia Minister To Tap UK, Ireland For Resources Workers
06 July 2011 - 5:26PM
Dow Jones News
Stung by a looming skills shortage that threatens to derail the
region's once-in-a-generation resources boom, Australia's mining
and petroleum industry is looking to the moribund economies of the
northern hemisphere to plug gaps in its workforce.
Western Australia state's training and workforce development
minister Peter Collier will set off Friday on a 10-day tour of the
U.K. and Ireland to recruit workers for the A$109 billion (US$116.9
billion) worth of development projects currently underway in the
state.
"We face potential labor shortages in the hundreds of
thousands," he said, pointing to government figures saying the
state of 2.3 million people risks a shortfall of 150,000 jobs by
2017.
"With a boom in the resources sector you have special
challenges. Industries like hospitality roll their eyes when they
hear about a resources boom because they lose all their workers,"
Collier added.
Truck drivers can win salary packages well over A$150,000
(US$160,800) a year in the Pilbara, a barren, baking hot region in
the north of Western Australia which accounts for 40% of the
world's iron ore exports. That compares with typical
financial-sector packages of around GBP100,000 in the U.K.
Adam Walker, director of Conduit Recruitment, a construction
jobs agency in Sydney, said his office receives 20 to 30
applications a week from the U.K. and Ireland.
"They obviously think it's better over here and pretty bad over
there. There's not much happening with construction in those
markets and there's a boom going on over here," he said.
Australia's hunger for workers provides a close match to the
dearth of construction jobs in northern hemisphere economies as
they retrench from the financial crisis. Job cuts in the U.K.'s
construction sector in June were the sharpest in five months,
according to the monthly Markit/CIPS purchasing managers' index
released Monday.
However, matching workers to jobs is easier said than done.
Justin Paul, a consultant for Contec Recruitment in Brisbane,
said that many overseas workers have a reputation for
unreliability. "You get these Irish and English blokes, they sign
them up, the guy works for six months and then wants to go to
Thailand for the rest of the year," he said.
In addition, many of the skills needed in Australia are highly
specialized. A bricklayer can't switch straight across to building
an offshore oil platform, said Walker, although many employers may
have to relax their criteria and agree to train people on the
job.
Collier said he would be visiting jobs fairs and meeting
recruitment companies in the U.K. cities of Leeds, Aberdeen and
London and the Irish capital, Dublin.
"They'll come back on the plane with us if we can get them," he
said.
The situation echoes Australia's history as a recipient of
British and Irish migrants. After the Second World War, tens of
thousands of British emigrants moved to Australia under a
government program which saw them dubbed "ten pound poms", in
reference to the subsidised cost of their ship tickets.
Shortages of workers have caused cost and time overruns on
several major resources projects in recent months. The ExxonMobil
Corp. (XOM) and BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP) Turrum and Kipper offshore
oil and gas joint ventures reported a 63% cost blowout to $4.4
billion in January because of labor costs and design changes.
BHP's Worsley alumina project south of Perth reported a $1.2
billion cost overrun last month, while the cost of Woodside
Petroleum Ltd.'s (WPL.AU) Pluto gas export project rose by A$900
million.
-By David Fickling, Dow Jones Newswires; +61 2 8272 4689; david.fickling@dowjones.com
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