Why BHP Employees in Port Hedland Are Preparing for Strike Action After Months of Talks

BHP workers at the world-leading export terminal for iron ore at Port Hedland, WA, are facing the threat of industrial action after the talks fell silent and became increasingly frustrating after six months.

Six Months of Stalled Talks

Getting to a possible BHP Port Hedland strike action has been a long journey. The Electrical Trades Union (ETU) has been at enterprise bargaining talks with BHP for a new contract for the port operations team of the mining giant since late 2025. The agreement is to apply to around 200 ETU members and about 250 of the port’s total workforce.

But months of negotiations have yielded little progress, according to the workers and their union representatives. ETU Western Australia Secretary Adam Woodage did not mince words at a press conference in Perth on 29 May 2026. The talks with BHP have been stalled for up to six months, he said. “No movement from the company and what movement they have is a slap in the face of our members.”

Since then, the union has filed an application for a protected action ballot order with the national workplace relations body, the Fair Work Commission (FWC), which, if granted, would give BHP employees legal permission to strike. Workers are supposed to vote in the next two weeks, and the ETU says a strike could “very likely” begin by the end of June if a pay deal is not reached.

What Are BHP Workers Demanding?

The heart of the dispute between the union and the mining companies in the Pilbara is about pay parity and working conditions. There are also indications that there are pay differences yet to be resolved between workers working under two different legal entities owned by BHP, and that this is part of an ongoing “systematic bargaining behaviour” at BHP’s Pilbara operations, according to the ETU.

The union also has charged BHP with bringing representatives to the table without the power to sign agreements — a charge that, if proven true, signals serious lack of good faith bargaining. BHP workers who have been without wage improvements for months after months of negotiations have come to a boiling point.

The Stakes: World’s Largest Bulk Iron Ore Export Port

Port Hedland is no ordinary port. It is the world’s biggest bulk iron ore export port, and a key route in BHP’s Western Australian iron ore supply chain. BHP’s iron ore production in the fiscal year to 30 June 2025 was 257 million tonnes, nearly all of which was exported from WA via Port Hedland. If there is any significant trouble with strike action at BHP Port Hedland, it could have consequences for the world’s iron ore markets and steel manufacturers in China, Japan and South Korea.

The ETU has a graduated escalation toolkit to put pressure on workers without immediately shutting down all operations, as unionised workers vote to approve work stoppages from as little as 15 minutes up to a full 24 hours.

BHP’s Response

BHP has admitted the negotiations are continuing and confirmed it is negotiating to reach a new enterprise agreement for its port operations team. A company source told Argus Media that contingency plans are already underway: We have strong contingency plans in place to ensure that our people are protected, and safe, reliable operations can continue in the event of union disruptions at our sites.

The company hasn’t commented on the specific grievances regarding the pay differences, nor on the allegations by the union that its negotiators were lacking in authority to strike a deal.

A Broader Warning for the Industry

The Port Hedland workers’ protest isn’t occurring in a vacuum. A number of around 350 BHP iron ore rail workers have also voted to go on strike, while there is also an ongoing dispute among tugboat engineers. If these concurrent Pilbara strikes are not resolved to the satisfaction of both miners and companies, it could prove to be a serious (and still emerging) challenge for the operation of Australia’s iron ore export line.

BHP pay dispute 2026 shows that the variable which has the greatest influence on Australia’s mining industry is not any other than the variable that occupies center stage in the world of investors and market analysts: labour relations. Everybody wants to see how BHP and ETU return to the negotiating table for a fair agreement, with workers ready to vote and the Fair Work Commission deciding on the union’s request.

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