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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Tata Steel invests £7m in new production line at Hartlepool Tube Mill facility

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest steelmaker is investing in the North East as it aims to improve capacity, reduce costs and reduce emissions

Tata Steel's Hartlepool Tube Mill.(Image: Supplied by Archie Hart at Headland Consultancy)

A new "slitting line" is to be launched at Tata Steel's Hartlepool Tube Mill site as part of a £7m investment.

The manufacturer said the new facilities will mean Hartlepool - which employs about 300 people producing 200,000 tonnes of steel tubes each year - is capable of processing coils of steel delivered from its main Port Talbot steelworks.

Current wide steel slabs are "slit" - cut to specified lengths and widths - at the Welsh facility before being rolled and sent to Hartlepool where they are turned into steel tubes used in everything from agricultural machinery to sports stadiums.

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Tata says the line will take more than a year to establish and that the investment will strengthen its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ business by improving services to customers and reducing emissions.

Andrew Ward, works manager of Tata Steel in Hartlepool, said: “This project will allow us to bring a vital process on site, which in turn will free up thousands of tonnes of capacity at the Port Talbot site.

“This will improve our efficiency and reduce overall CO 2 emissions from our steel processing as well as reducing the total costs across the business.”

Tata also said the investment is expected to pay for itself within three years and is part of a wider ambition to produce net zero steel by 2050.