About 122 TransAlta employees could be laid off by the end of February as the company continues its transition to natural gas, according to the union which represents workers at Highvale Mine.
United Steel Workers Local 1595 said it first heard about the job losses in December.
“It’s not a surprise,” Roy Milne said on Thursday. “We know there will be more.”
The union said the first round of layoffs will take place Feb. 28 with a second round coming the first week of April.
The original number Milne heard was 122 but he said it might end up lower when voluntary layoffs, retirement and workers finding other jobs are factored in.
He said the number of hourly employees at Highvale Mine has dropped from 650 to about 410, as of Feb. 12.
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“There will be more layoffs later in the year when they establish how little coal will be hauled compared to the past,” he added.
TransAlta would not confirm the number of jobs impacted, but issued a statement to Global News.
“As TransAlta continues the transition to natural gas-fuelled power plants, activities at the Highvale Mine continue to slow down and there will be associated job losses.
“Employees are aware that there will be layoffs at the mine in end of February.
“TransAlta continues to work with unions, government agencies, Indigenous communities and educational institutions to support affected workers in making the transition to re-employment, new career and educational opportunities,” the statement reads.
Highvale Mine is located south of Wabamun Lake, about 70 kilometres west of Edmonton. It’s one of TransAlta’s three surface coal mines and the largest surface strip mine in Canada. It’s been operating since 1970.
According to its website, TransAlta employs more than 2,300 people and runs over 60 facilities.
Of those operations, 57 per cent capacity is coal, while 17 per cent is gas.
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In November 2016, Environment Minister Shannon Phillips said the province struck a deal with three major coal-sourced power producers that would see the government pay them a total of $97 million a year over the next 14 years as they transition away from coal.
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In April 2017, TransAlta announced it was committed to phasing out its coal-fired power plants years ahead of Alberta government deadlines.
While some of TransAlta’s coal facilities are being shut this year, others are planned to be converted to natural gas facilities by the end of 2023, six years ahead of the NDP government’s deadline.
— With files from Phil Heidenreich, Global News