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道化工亚省工厂将裁员! B2 U ^# ]3 O3 y
Dow Chemical's Alberta facilities will see layoffs
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EDMONTON — Some employees at Dow Chemical’s Alberta facilities have been notified they will be laid off but the full extent of the job cuts won’t be known until late next week, a company spokesperson said Wednesday.
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Mary-Lea Crawford, public affairs manager for Dow at Fort Saskatchewan, would not say how many layoff notices have been handed out so far. 6 w# M5 u. @0 Y* B
, q4 r/ U: R2 A w* t! vThe cuts are not expected to be as deep as the 11-per-cent target announced by the U.S.-based company in December, she said.
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% j* G5 ~# c0 pDow employs about 630 people in Alberta, with 550 in Fort Saskatchewan with the balance at its Prentiss facility near Red Deer.
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Dow posted weaker-than-expected fourth-quarter results on Tuesday because demand has plummeted in markets such as the construction, electronics and automotives.
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Dow has tried to revamp its earnings profile over the past two years, first by announcing plans to sell a 50- per-cent stake in its cyclical basic plastics business to Kuwaiti investors for more than $9 billion. Then, in July, it announced plans to spend more than $15 billion to acquire Rohm and Haas using proceeds from the joint venture.* e% M7 K% E7 y) e+ w! j
# p8 u4 e0 i$ QDow’s plans faltered when Kuwait backed out of the joint venture. Rohm and Haas said its merger agreement with Dow, was not contingent on the Kuwait transaction.; b I6 _- ]; [0 i
- Z% @3 C% n: SPhiladelphia-based Rohm and Haas sued Dow in a bid to force the deal to close. Dow filed its response to the lawsuit on Tuesday.1 G# S; C9 \! ^5 z/ ~0 A/ w! o( ^/ C
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Dow argued the agreement was not binding, because it was impossible to carry out “without jeopardizing the very existence of both companies.” |
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