Fifty offshore oil and gas workers based on the Elgin Franklin platform near Aberdeen and the North Alwyn platform close ...

Facebook
X
LinkedIn

Fifty offshore oil and gas workers based on the Elgin Franklin platform near Aberdeen and the North Alwyn platform close to the Shetland Isles are to be balloted on strike action following what their union has described as a “shameful” pay offer from their employer, TotalEnergies.

The dispute centres on a proposed pay increase of 1.5% earlier this year, which was rejected by workers, followed by a revised offer of 1.75% that was also turned down. 

Unite the Union argues that, when adjusted for inflation, the new tax year, and the rising cost of living, the offer represents a real-terms pay cut for the skilled engineers, control room staff, and technicians involved.

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham criticised TotalEnergies, highlighting that the company reported an adjusted net income of £13.7 billion in 2024, with a cash flow of £29.9 billion, yet is “trying to impose a real terms pay cut” on its workforce. 

The union described the company’s approach as “shameful behaviour from an extraordinarily profitable company”.

The ballot opens on 29 April and will close on 2 June, with industrial action a possibility if workers vote in favour.

Related stories from SBN

Burges Salmon advises on $7.5m clean energy deal across Africa
One of world’s largest wind farms to be built off East Lothian coast
Root-Power secures landmark national grid deal to fast-track UK battery storage projects
Subsea Expo 2026 to showcase next wave of underwater innovation
Strong year end results for Inverness energy group targeting revenues of £500m
CMA warns fuel margins ‘persistently high’ as new fuel finder scheme set to launch

Other stories from SBN