Opel Unions, Magna Reach Deal on Job Cuts

Oct. 22, 2009
Magna has agreed to cut a maximum of 900 jobs at the factory in Spain, less than the 1,300 it had originally sought.

Unions at the Opel factory in Spain on Oct. 22 reached a preliminary deal with Canadian auto parts maker Magna International on the plant's future, the government and unions said. The CCOO union said Magna has agreed to cut a maximum of 900 jobs at the factory in Figueruelas, less than the 1,300 it had sought when the talks began last week.

The unions said that Magna also pledged to maintain the bulk of the production at the plant of Opel's five-door Corsa, Merival and other models. Unions had feared some of the production would be moved to Germany.

"Magna is committed to maintaining two production lines and with production capacity of 478,000 units per year," the UGT union said.

Industry Minister Miguel Sebastian hailed the deal, saying "the future of the factory is guaranteed for 10 years."

Spanish unions said they are maintaining plans to hold two 48-hour strikes for late October and early November until they can vote on today's deal.

Last month announced the sale of a majority stake in its European arm Opel to Magna and its partner, Russian state-owned lender Sberbank. The deal was supposed to be finalized last week but was then criticized by the European Commission owing to a clear preference by Berlin for Magna's bid over several alternatives. Magna is reportedly planning to cut 10,500 jobs across Europe.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2009

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