IOCC workers on strike

More than 1,400 workers at Iron Ore Co. of Canada (IOCC) went on strike in late July, shutting down mine production at the plant in Labrador, which supplies roughly 4% of the world’s iron pellets.

IOCC is 59%-owned London-based Rio Tinto and 26% by Mitsubishi of Japan. Labrador Iron Ore Royalty Income Fund owns the remainder.

Iron pellets and concentrate continue to be shipped from port facilities at Sept-les in eastern Quebec. However, once iron supplies run out, the company could be forced to declare force majeure if a settlement is not reached.

IOCC operates an open-pit mine, concentrator and pellet-making plant at Labrador City, as well as the port facilities at Sept-les. Last year, the company produced 12 million tonnes of pellets.

The company said in a release that it had “effectively removed monetary concessions” and offered base wage increases to many employees in exchange for more “workplace flexibility.”

In another labour-related development, U.S.-based Cleveland Cliffs, the largest producer of iron-ore pellets in North America, has restarted talks with its workers in an attempt to reach a new deal and avoid a shutdown.

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