Israel defies unions with seaport tenders

Israel defies unions with seaport tenders

JERUSALEM - Reuters

Israel issued a tender to operate two private ports with state-run terminals.

Israel issued a tender yesterday for two privately-run seaports to operate alongside state-owned terminals, a move to stir competition that puts the government on a collision course with powerful labour unions.

Unions at the country’s two largest ports have threatened action to prevent the emergence of competing private ports where they would have less influence over management.

For years the government had been unwilling to risk a confrontation that could paralyse vital sea routes. With Israel surrounded by unfriendly neighbours, 99 percent of its exports and imports are transported by ship.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was reelected in January with a mandate for sweeping economic reforms, said no strike would prevent the tenders going ahead. The additional competition, he said, would lower prices of nearly all goods in Israel and make the country’s exports more attractive.

“No longer will 2,000 people be able to strangle the economy, paralyse the country,” Netanyahu said at a news conference. “The age of monopolies at Israel’s seaports is over and it will never return.”

Manufacturing, trade and shipping companies have long complained about poor service and lengthy waiting times in the state-operated ports of Ashdod and Haifa.

The two new Mediterranean terminals, at a cost of about $1 billion each, will be operated by foreign firms and will have enough capacity to host the world’s largest cargo ships, something not possible today. They will also create hundreds of new jobs, said Finance Minister Yair Lapid.The unions, as well as leaders from the 800,000 member umbrella Histadrut federation, have said they would never allow competing, private ports.