ICEM UPDATE

No. 1/1999

5 January 1999

The following is from the International Federation of
Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions
(ICEM):

STATOIL TO DITCH CROWN CENTRAL?

TALK TO THE UNION OR ELSE, OIL MULTINATIONAL WARNS U.S.
PARTNER

Oil multinational Statoil has told America's Crown
Central Petroleum that its contract to refine Statoil
crude will not be renewed until normal relationships are
established with the trade union at Crown's refinery in
Pasadena, Texas. 

Statoil has also reportedly informed Crown that no
further expansion of business cooperation will be
discussed until the US refiner sorts out its disastrous
labour relations.

Behind this New Year boost for global labour rights is
the Norwegian oil and petrochemical workers' union NOPEF.
In solidarity with US oilworkers' union the OCAW, NOPEF
pressed Norwegian-based Statoil to help end Crown
Central's union-busting in Pasadena.

Crown has kept unionised workers locked out of its
Pasadena refinery since February 1996. It launched the
lock-out after it had failed to force OCAW members into
a strike. The company used trumped-up charges of sabotage
to justify the lock-out in its attempt to destroy the
union at its Pasadena refinery.

Last August, Statoil signed a two-year agreement for
Crown to refine Statoil's crude oil into finished
products for the North American market.

The new Statoil threat to ditch Crown is "a highly
unusual action by a multinational oil company and further
isolates Crown as a corporate outlaw, bully and
union-buster on the world scene," said OCAW President
Robert Wages. "This should send a strong message to other
oil companies not to deal with Crown, and we applaud
NOPEF for communicating our concerns to Statoil's
management and board."

The news of Statoil's warning to Crown was released by
the OCAW, which had been informed by NOPEF. 
After a first-hand investigation of Crown's union-busting
last September, NOPEF President Lars Myhre declared that
"Statoil products should not be tainted by its
association with Crown."

"Statoil supplies the American refinery with 35,000
barrels of oil a day," Myhre wrote in NOPEF's magazine
last October. "I have been in touch with Statoil and I am
going to raise the Crown case with the company again...
Statoil must either break off the contract with Crown or
use its influence to change the company's ideas for the
better, so that the dispute can be resolved decently.
Things canno t go on as they are now."

Myhre chairs the energy workers' section of the
20-million-strong International Federation of Chemical,
Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions (ICEM), to which
both NOPEF and the OCAW are affiliated.

Last July, Statoil and the ICEM signed a pioneering
global agreement on industrial relations (see ICEM UPDATE
66/1998). Crown Central falls outside the scope of that
accord, which applies to Statoil's own operations
worldwide. However, the new pressure on Crown will
certainly be seen as further proof of Statoil's
commitment to union rights worldwide, as set out in the
agreement.

In addition to union-busting, Crown stands accused of
discriminating against women and African-Americans and of
environmental racism for polluting low-income and largely
Latino neighbourhoods which surround its Pasadena
refinery. 

In August, Crown received a 1.1 million US dollar (0.93
million euro) fine from the Texas Natural Resource
Conservation Commission. This was the largest air
pollution fine in Texas history.

Meanwhile, an OCAW-backed boycott of Crown's US service
stations and convenience stores has spread in recent
months.

Further proof of the company's isolation is a decision by
the American Trading and Production Company, Inc.
(Atapco) - Crown's largest stockholder - to relinquish
its ownership of Crown stock. Atapco consists of the
inherited wealth of Louis and Jacob Blaustein, the
founders of Amoco. It filed papers with the Securities
and Exchange Commission to separate its holdings into
three separate companie s and to give its Crown stock to
the family of Crown CEO Henry Rosenberg Jr, which is one
of three major branches of the extended Blaustein family,
in exchange for the remainder of the Rosenberg family's
Atapco holdings.

"Even Crown's largest shareholder has had enough of Henry
Rosenberg and is trying to get out of the line of fire,"
said Wages.

Crown stock has been rocked in recent months, and at
times it has dropped to below 7 US dollars (5.92 euro)
per share, the lowest in its history. Credit rating
agency Moody's has given Crown a negative rating. 

Recently, Crown shareholders filed a lawsuit against
Crown board members and management for malfeasance and
presiding over an 80 percent drop in Crown stock during
a decade of unprecedented increases in the US stock
market and in the stock of other independent US oil
companies. The lawsuit alleges that Crown's management
and board have rewarded Henry Rosenberg and his two sons,
while ignoring shareholder value.