Npower confirms 1,460 UK jobs to go
- Published
Energy giant Npower has confirmed that 1,460 UK jobs are to go as part of a major corporate restructuring.
The company, owned by Germany's RWE, plans to outsource much of its customer service and back office functions to Capita and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), it said in a statement.
But call centres would remain in the UK, it added.
Npower, one of the UK's "big six" gas and electricity suppliers, currently employs 9,600 people in the UK.
Chief executive Paul Massara said: "This restructure is necessary if we are to deliver the levels of service our customers deserve."
About 540 of Npower's existing staff will transfer to Capita under TUPE - Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 - which effectively protects their existing terms and conditions, the company said.
The outsourcing would help Npower cope with peak time calls, it argued.
Back office work, such as checking meter readings against customers' bills, would be outsourced to India using TCS, said Npower.
The 1,460 redundancies would take place over the next eight months, with the following sites affected:
Stoke-on-Trent office to close: 550 jobs affected
Oldbury: one office to close, 400 jobs affected
Rainton Bridge, Sunderland: 430 jobs affected
Leeds: 80 jobs affected
Thornaby site to close, but jobs relocated to Rainton head office
No redundancies at the three Peterlee offices, but teams to be moved between the Rainton and Peterlee offices.
"I understand that these changes would be incredibly hard for some of our employees and we'll be doing everything we can to support them over the next few months," said Mr Massara.
More cuts
These latest job cuts come on top of the planned closure of its Kingswinford site in the West Midlands, announced earlier this year, which housed about 300 call centre and IT support staff.
About 120 of these IT jobs were outsourced to Indian firm Wipro and the UK's Computacenter, an Npower spokeswoman confirmed to the BBC, while the call centre staff were relocated to Worcester.
The Kingswinford site is due to close completely "at the end of the year", she said.
In October, Npower said it would raise household gas and electricity prices by 10.4% on average, blaming the increase partly on the cost of implementing the government's carbon-reduction policies.
Owner RWE has already said it will cut 6,750 jobs across Europe between 2014 and 2016.
- Published14 November 2013
- Published14 November 2013
- Published5 November 2013