Canadian Pacific Railway set to halt operations if labour talks fail
BNN Bloomberg
One of Canada’s largest railways is gearing up to halt operations after failing to reach a labour deal with unionized workers.
One of Canada’s largest railways is gearing up to halt operations after failing to reach a labor deal with unionized workers.
Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. has issued a 72-hour notice to the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference of plans to lock-out employees early Sunday if the union’s leadership and the company fail to negotiate a settlement or agree to binding arbitration, the company said on its website. The parties have been in daily discussions but “remain far apart.” Canadian Pacific will continue to bargain with the union to achieve a settlement.
Canadian Pacific “has commenced its work stoppage contingency plan and will work closely with customers to achieve a smooth, efficient and safe wind-down of Canadian operations,” the company said.
A work stoppage means CP can’t operate the railway and will create a “freight capacity crisis,” the railway said earlier this month in a note to its customers. The Teamsters represents about 3,000 of CP’s locomotive engineers and conductors.
The disruption is poised to create more uncertainty in fertilizer markets just as farmers need key nutrients to plant spring crops. Canada, along with Russia and Belarus, is one of the main sources for the world’s potash, a mined mineral used in crop nutrients. Sanctions on Belarus and Russia following the invasion of Ukraine have already created a global shortfall and skyrocketing prices.
CP is the primary rail transportation provider for the delivery of Saskatchewan potash to overseas markets, according to the provincial government.