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Whisky loss leaves bitter taste

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Published Date: 02 July 2009
JOHNNIE Walker whisky bottle labels will have to change after parent company Diageo announced an overhaul that will see the closure of its last operation in the brand's home town of Kilmarnock.
The whisky is set to lose its 189-year association with the town under plans to shut the packaging plant in a major re-structuring of Scottish operations that will see 900 job losses – 700 of them in Kilmarnock – in a bid to save about £40 million
a year .

The company announced yesterday its historic distillery at Port Dundas, Glasgow, which produced whisky since 1810, would also close.

Scotland is one of Diageo's largest spirit supply centres, currently employing about 4,500 people and producing nearly 50 million cases of Scotch whisky and white spirits.

Last night, Des Browne, Labour MP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun, said the news was "devastating".

"Every bottle of Johnnie Walker has a label which says that this whisky has been bottled in Kilmarnock since 1820," he said.

"The town of Kilmarnock and the people of Ayrshire have contributed to this business's profits for nearly two centuries. I'm told that these are proposals. The company now needs to work with their staff in Kilmarnock and revise these proposals as they did ten years ago to maintain this presence in and these jobs. That's what I'll be working for from today."

Yesterday, Diageo apologised to staff affected by the announcement, but said the move followed an "exhaustive review".

Bryan Donaghey, managing director of Diageo Scotland, said: "These decisions have been extremely difficult to take. We have only reached them after an exhaustive review of all the possible alternatives.

"I am sorry for the impact this announcement will have on our employees and their families in Kilmarnock and Glasgow and the difficulty this will cause in Kilmarnock, where we are a major employer."

The firm hopes to save an extra £40m a year, principally from the changes in Scotland, on top of £120m a year identified around its global operations and expected cost savings from its Irish review.

The jobs will go over the next two years, but Diageo said changes in Scotland will also see 400 jobs created through the expansion of its packaging plant in Fife.

The group's restructuring in Scotland will mark the end of nearly 200 years of distilling at the Port Dundas operation and about 140 jobs will be lost when the distillery and its adjacent Dundashill Cooperage close, although Diageo is hoping to relocate some staff to a new cooperage in central Scotland.

The move to close its Kilmarnock packaging plant and consolidate operations in its other two facilities in Glasgow and Fife will have the biggest impact on jobs, with 700 posts to go by the end of 2011. Diageo hopes to transfer a number of positions to the Fife plant, which is being expanded under an £86m scheme.

Changes at its Shieldhall packaging plant in Glasgow will also lead to 30 job losses, said Diageo, while the group is relocating about 80 office-based staff from Dundas House in Glasgow to a location in central Scotland over the next two years.

A spokesman for the Scotch Whisky Association said: "The Scotch whisky industry is working hard to invest to secure its sustainability and competitiveness, which is so important to the Scottish economy."

The Kilmarnock grocer who created an icon

Johnnie Walker whisky has had a link to Kilmarnock for almost 200 years and is one of Scotland's oldest brands

JOHNNIE Walker is one of Diageo's oldest brands and claims to be the world's top-selling Scotch whisky, with 16.3 million cases sold annually.

Mr Walker founded the whisky business when he launched a grocery store in Kilmarnock and began distilling whisky to sell in the shop. It has since been created and bottled in various sites across Scotland. About 80 per cent of the brand's volume is bottled at Diageo's Shieldhall packaging plant in Glasgow.

The Kilmarnock packaging plant has gone through many transitions since it opened in 1956 and currently produces 11 million cases each year from 17 bottling lines.

The plant was originally set on a seven-acre site and featured seven production lines and just one bottling hall.

In numbers

• 700 jobs lost at Kilmarnock

• 140 jobs lost at Port Dundas Distillery and Dundashill

• 30 jobs lost at Shieldhall packaging plant

• 400 jobs created at Leven

• 80 office jobs at Dundas House transferred

• 40 staff transferred from Carsebridge to Cambus sites

• 64 warehouse jobs at Hurlford transferred

• 36 remaining Hurlford jobs relocated

• 16 jobs in Speyside transferred







The full article contains 777 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 02 July 2009 12:17 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scotsman Whisky
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 00:18:53

I did say on many occasion's many moons ago, that this would take place, "Made-in-China", ring any Bell's!?



2

Electric Hermit,

02/07/2009 00:47:32
Union dividend anybody?

3

donald,

glasgow 02/07/2009 05:26:44
Lord Guinness of the Monday Club, "Made in England", ring any Bells?

The original London Guinness family would not employ Catholics in its Dublin operation.

When they took over Scottish Distilleries they promised top move their HQ from London to Scotland. Instead they closed the Scottish HQ and several distilleries, such as Black and Whyte, Buchanan's, etc.

What has Lord Fooks got to say about this from his London HQ in the House of Horrors? He receives an £8,000 per annum from Johnnie Walkers, last time I heard.
4

donald,

glasgow 02/07/2009 05:31:33
They should have brought in their Loyalist Labourites from the Celtic Board, with Loyalist Court Jester, Sir William Connolly to fill the gap.
5

Roy,

02/07/2009 06:34:15
Donald: He receives an £8,000 per annum from Johnnie Walkers, last time I heard.

Not according to the Register of Interests: http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/msp/memberspages/George_Foulkes/roi.htm
6

Audrey Halliday,

02/07/2009 08:27:22
Jim Mather our Enterprise Minister was on holiday yesterday...........

Don't our MSP's and Ministers get an enormous holiday over the summer.

He and 9 others I think used holiday as a reason for not attending the 10th anniversary of Scotlands devolution.

Working hard for Scotland?

Go an tell that to the tens of thousands of workers who are now on the dole through no fault of their own.

All from the private sector I believe.









7

JimC,

Kilmarnock 02/07/2009 08:43:14
#6
And what's your point????
8

11 Ron,

02/07/2009 08:52:38
#1 What a load of tosh!

It's a legal requirement that Scotch Whisky is distilled and matured in Scotland (for at least 3 years). Diageo are a British company with a HQ in London.....

....TBH I doubt the Japanese could afford to buy it!
9

Herman The German,

02/07/2009 10:05:53
#1.

Ring any bell's what?
Again with the errant apostrophe,between this and your"I would of thought" you do really make a proper Charlie of yourself.
10

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 10:25:22

#9,

"Bell's" double take!
This is correct as in "Bell's" Whisky, 'doughnut' comes to mind.

11

Herman The German,

02/07/2009 10:41:31
#10,
Oh I see, it was an attempt at literary wit,don,t give up the day job Charlie.
12

Herman The German,

02/07/2009 10:45:14
and "doughnut comes to mind" your obsession with holes is understandable.
13

Shopping anyone?,

02/07/2009 13:26:46
On one hand Salmond wants talks to avert the Kilmarnock closure and other job losses (in his dreams)Meantime, he and his cronies are pursuing a minimum price fix which would ultimately help shut even more production down in Scotland - is this not in direct contradiction of those very talks he seeks?
14

Noodle doodle,

02/07/2009 13:52:40
So, scottish politicians say alcohol is good when it's employing hundreds of people, but bad when it's killing people early, causing fights and costing the health service billions. No contradiction there. At all.
15

JC1,

Glasgow 02/07/2009 13:58:40
#14 - salmond is always trying to take contradictory positions on everything. It doesn't matter though as his lack of foreknowledge of this demonstrates his irrelevance and lack of commitment to the job in hand
16

DialMforMurdoX,

02/07/2009 14:09:50
#14 What a dribbling comment. Mimum pricing does not effect premium brands. It's aimed at the 2 litres of high strength ciders and alcopops.

Rather than bend over and accept this shafting from Diageo, a cross party campaign should be orchestrated calling for a boycott of all Diageo products until they change their minds. Remember this si about profit not recession.

Kilmarnock is synonymous with Johnnie Walker. We're talking about a near 200 year association with the town. Hit them in their pockets. Boycott Diageo.
17

,

02/07/2009 17:31:18
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
18

Tartan Bond,

02/07/2009 19:14:13
DialMforMurdoX # 17

"Boycott Diageo."

Diageo like all companies with Scottish interests are worrying about Salmond's putative independence dividend. They are worried, rightly so, about massively increased taxes in Salmond's independent Scotland.

For an SNP supporter, you, to say "Boycott Diageo" pours fuel on those fears. Just watch that your SNP boycott policy doesn't lead to companies boycotting Scotland.
19

Darien,

Panama 02/07/2009 21:08:29
#19 Tartan Bond: You are way off track.

FM Salmond has let Diageo know in no uncertain terms that what they are suggesting is totally unacceptable. See: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/8130165.stm

Meanwhile Lord Mandelson this morning simply says this is a consequence of the global economy (and tough luck for Kilmarnock) but he cannot do anything about it. Maybe Des Browne has not yet heard the message from London New Labour HQ.

If you want to talk about tax, you might at least refer to the excessive duties and regular increases imposed by HM Treasury on Scotch whisky, which by the way is the UK's largest food&drink export.

It is really rather easy to see who stands up for Scotland; it aint New Labour, and it aint Westminster.
20

JimC,

Kilmarnock 02/07/2009 22:36:55
Desperate to hang on to his Kilmarnock seat, Browne and his side kick Brian Donohoe have already decided in the course of ONE DAY, that their position is to blame the SNP as both are singing from the same hymn-sheet. If either had the welfare of the workers at heart then I suggest that their time be better spent working out how to salvage the situation in conjunction with the Scottish Parliament. It seems that the lessons of the last year that saw Labour wiped out at the polls has not been learned. Divisive and negative party politics is something Kilmarnock does not need at this time.
21

Failin Palin,

10/07/2009 04:47:24
It's all over rover.

 

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