Indian power unions campaign

Indian electricity workers demonstrate for tripartite agreement and against unfair dismissals
PSI-AP News (Aug 2008)
http://www.world-psi.org/Content/ContentGroups/English7/Publications1/Asia_Pacific_News/AP_News_August_2008.pdf
 
On 1 July 2008, PSI affiliate the Delhi State Electricity Workers Union organised a day of action when 10,000 women and men formed a rally and a peace march to submit a memorandum to the Governor of New Delhi State. The issue at stake was the respect of a tripartite agreement after the privatization of Delhi Electricity Supply in 2000. The management (IPGCL and Delhi Transco Ltd) have deliberately ignored the agreement and have never responded to the union nor invited them for discussions.   The union is also demanding the reinstatement of five IPGCL employees whose employment was terminated early April. The reason for their dismissal is that they “shouted slogans” criticizing the management.  The union is covering these workers’ expenses from its own funds, and will continue the campaign until management invites them for discussions, reinstates the sacked employees and restores the functions of the tripartite agreement. PSI has written a letter to the Lt. Governor of New Delhi, Chief Minister and Power Minister urging the management to reinstate the employees and to respect the tripartite agreement.
 
Indian power workers strike against privatisation plan
http://www.world-psi.org/TemplateEn.cfm?Section=Whats_New&CONTENTID=23414&TEMPLATE=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm
 
(2009)  The Uttar Pradesh Power Corporation Ltd (UPPCL) employees and engineers will observe a one-day strike on October 8, 2009 against the scheduled transfer of power distribution system in the cities of Agra and Kanpur to Torrent Power, a private power company, member of the Rs. 45 billion Torrent Group.
As a prelude to the strike, the power workers will hold a 48-hour work boycott on October 6. They have warned that they will take immediate action if the power distribution was transferred before the strike.
UPPCL staff, under the banner of Power Employees Joint Action Committee (JAC) – (of which PSI affiliate Vidyut Karmachari Morcha Sanghathan is a vital partner), alleged UPPCL was proceeding with the franchisee-based power distribution although there had been significant reductions in line losses of late. JAC spokesperson Shailendra Dubey said revenue generation in Kanpur during 2008-09 had improved compared to 2007-08. In fact, the improvement in revenue is close to the rates quoted by Torrent Power in its bid. Sources said UPPCL engineers pointed out to the Torrent officials that the average tariff of Rs 2.87 quoted by Torrent for Agra would actually come to Rs 4 per unit for consumers.
Torrent was selected through competitive bidding in February 2009 and a formal agreement signed on May 18. Although Torrent had promised perquisites over salary to power workers, JAC remains committed on its demand not to implement the franchisee power distribution model. Seven other cities are also under study, namely Bareilly, Moradabad, Gorakhpur, Varanasi, Allahabad, Aligarh and Meerut.