Saskatchewan Wheat Development Commission (Sask Wheat) is calling on the Federal Government to use all tools necessary to ensure the parties come to an agreement as soon as possible with the Grain Workers Union (GWU) strike at the Port of Vancouver, which will stop all shipments of bulk grain.
On Saturday, September 21, 2024, the Grain Workers Union issued a strike notice, placing it in a legal strike position starting Tuesday, September 24th at 7 a.m. PT. The job action involves approximately 650 grain workers in the bargaining unit. A strike would fully shut down operations at the following bulk grain export terminals in Vancouver:
• Alliance Grain Terminal,
• Cascadia Terminal,
• Cargill,
• G3 Terminal,
• Pacific Elevators, and
• Richardson International.
Sask Wheat represents approximately 24,000 Saskatchewan wheat and winter cereals producers for whom timely, responsive, and efficient supply chains are fundamental to
competitiveness and profitability. Saskatchewan produces almost half of the non-durum wheat and 80 percent of the durum grown in Canada annually, the majority of which is moved by rail to ocean ports and then to export markets.
“The Port of Vancouver is critical to Canada’s grain supply chain, as 70 percent of Western Canadian grain shipments are exported through Vancouver,” says Jake Leguee, Chair of Sask Wheat’s board of directors. Data from the Canadian Grain Commission shows that these terminals receive approximately 100,000 metric tonnes of grain per day, resulting in $35 million in lost export potential per day if a work stoppage occurs.