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Manufacturing

Steelworkers at Port Talbot and Llanwern to start working to rule action

Members of the Unite union said workers at Tata's Port Talbot steelworks and downstream Llanwern plant will also enforce a ban on overtime working

Tata steelworks in Port Talbot that will be closing down it's blast furnaces later this year to be replaced with an electric arc furnace. Pictured: Blast furnace number four is pictured at the Tata Steel Port Talbot integrated iron and steel works in south Wales (Image: John Myers)

More than 1,500 steelworkers at Port Talbot and Llanwern will begin working to rule next week as well as an overtime ban in its dispute with Tata over its plans to end blast furnace steelmaking.

The Indian-owned company said it will not shift from its position of closing the two blast furnaces at its Port Talbot steelworks.

This will see blast furnace No 5 shutting down at end of this month and No 4 at the end of September. Instead the steelmaker plans to build a new electric arc furnace (EAF) which would make steel from scrap.

The move will see 2,800 jobs losses at its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-wide operations, where it employs 8,000. However, the biggest impact, with nearly 2,000 jobs, will be felt at Port Talbot where Tata has already closed its coke ovens.

Unite’s overtime ban and work to rule is the first time in 40 years that there has been industrial action in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ steel industry. In its General Election manifesto the Labour Party has committed to a £2.5bn fund to support the decarbonisation of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ steelmaking over the next decade.

It is unclear how much of that could be assigned to Port Talbot. Labour has backed a union plan for a phased approach to decarbonisation at Port Talbot by running blast furnace no 4 until its expiry date in 2032.

Tata insists it will not shift no its decision to close the blast furnaces regardless of a Labour taking power at Westminster following the General Election on July 4th.

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “Tata’s workers are taking this industrial action because they know the company’s claim that jobs cannot be retained in South Wales during the transition to green steel is a lie. They are standing up and fighting for a better future, one in which Tata’s British business can take full advantage of the coming green steel boom and not be sacrificed to benefit its operations abroad.