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BHP iron ore workers vote to strike on July 16 at Port Hedland

By Thomson Reuters Jul 7, 2026 | 9:38 PM

MELBOURNE, July 8 (Reuters) – Workers at BHP’s Port Hedland operations in Western Australia gave notice on Wednesday of an eight-hour work stoppage set for July 16, which is set to disrupt daily ​revenue of A$120 million ($83.16 million) worth of iron ore.

Unions have ‌called for the action after six months of negotiations that have failed to reach an agreement on terms for a four-year labour deal.

Employees across the company’s port operations and maintenance workforce represented by the Combined Ports Unions will participate in the strike, ‌according ​to a union statement.

“This is nobody’s preferred way ⁠forward, but when it is ⁠our only way forward, we will take it,” said Electrical Trades Union WA Secretary Adam Woodage.

“I hope this sharpens the minds of BHP managers – and shareholders – on the importance of negotiating for a fair, ​safe and productive iron ore industry.”

The action comes after workers at some of BHP’s other operations in the Pilbara last week narrowly voted ⁠to approve a new labour agreement.

“We have ⁠delivered a new enterprise agreement at Mining Area C ​and South Flank that rewards 1,800 workers – without industrial action,” BHP said in ​a statement.

“Every Australian benefits from a strong iron ore sector. ‌We are eager to keep negotiating constructively for a fair deal, while making sure we can keep operations running safely.”

BHP shares were down 3.3% at A$56.92, slightly outpacing losses among other miners and compared to a 0.9% ⁠decline for Australia’s benchmark stock index.

Unions are making the biggest push in 30 years to penetrate Australia’s mining heartland since the Labor government enacted a law ⁠in 2022 giving them ‌the power to negotiate wage deals that cover ⁠several employers, more scope to request flexible arrangements and ​allow industry-wide ‌strikes.

The South Flank agreement last week included a ​guaranteed 16% ⁠pay hike over its four-year term, increases to site-based allowances and a new payment scheme for delayed flights.

Port Hedland, which is also used by Fortescue and Hancock, ships around $150 million of iron ore a day, underscoring the scale of potential disruption.

($1 = 1.4430 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus ​and Kevin Buckland)