GE says plans to cut 6,500 jobs in Europe in next two years

Spokesman says GE’s Irish operations are not impacted by the redundancies

General Electric plans to cut 6,500 jobs in Europe over the next two years, including 765 in France and 1,300 in Switzerland.
General Electric plans to cut 6,500 jobs in Europe over the next two years, including 765 in France and 1,300 in Switzerland.

General Electric plans to cut 6,500 jobs in Europe over the next two years, including 765 in France and 1,300 in Switzerland, the company said on Wednesday.

A spokesman for the group said GE’s Irish operations are not impacted by the job cuts.

A second spokesman in France said GE was sticking to its pledge to create 1,000 net jobs there in the next three years as part of its acquisition of Alstom’s energy business.

He added that the company was looking at job cuts at its headquarters in Levallois and La Defense, but not at Belfort, the heart of Alstom’s former energy unit.

READ SOME MORE

He said that unions had been informed on Tuesday and that talks would start on Wednesday. The jobs concerned were mainly in support functions such as human resources, legal and communication.

“This is a plan, which could change following discussion with employee representatives,” he said.

He gave no details on which other countries would be hit, but GE said in a separate statement that it had begun talks with workers in Switzerland, where 1,300 jobs could be impacted by the measures.

Those cuts were expected to be in the gas and steam power businesses, which have experienced a slump in recent years.

GE’s takeover of Alstom’s energy business - which includes gas and steam turbines, wind turbines, turbines for hydro dams and power grids - added about 65,000 employees to GE’s workforce of about 305,000 and significantly expanded GE’s reach in the global market for power generation equipment.

The head of GE's power division said in September the company would seek to wring out $3 billion in cost savings over five years from the Alstom acquisition.

Reuters