Following overnight talks into Friday morning, employers' association Arbeitgeberverband Stahl and labor union IG Metall announced that 72,000 steelworkers in northwestern Germany would receive 2.3 percent more pay from April.

The wage agreement also includes a further wage hike of 1.7 percent from May next year, with the deal scheduled to run until the end of 2018. It is expected to serve as a pilot deal for the remaining 16,000 steelworkers in other German regions.

IG Metall chief negotiator Knut Giesler described the result as "acceptable," as it reflected the present situation in the industry and would give workers an increase in real wages.

Originally, the steelworkers wanted to get 4.5 percent more over the course of the next 12 months. But company representatives, including those from German steel behemoths ThyssenKrupp and Salzgitter AG, had offered only 1.3 percent, unleashing warning strikes across the sector.

Employers' representative Andreas Gross said the wage package presented "no reason to jubilate" for both sides. He cited an improving sector outlook, higher inflation and bigger pay deals in other sectors as reasons why the talks couldn't prevent the "additional burden" for companies.

In February, Germany's federal states agreed with trade unions a two-stage wage increase of 4.35 percent for more than two million civil servants and other public sector employees.

Rising wages have played an increasing role for German growth in the past few years, boosting private consumption as an important pillar of economic activity.

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uhe/kd (Reuters, dpa, AP)