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PRIVACY
Opinion

The end of an era for º£½ÇÊÓÆµ steelmaking with Tata to move Port Talbot to electric arc furnaces

The decision will see around 3,000 Tata Steel º£½ÇÊÓÆµ jobs lost with the majority in Port Talbot

Port Talbot steelworks(Image: Richard Williams)

The ending of blast furnace primary steelmaking at Port Talbot not only signals the death knell of an industry that has played a crucial role in the Welsh economy since the industrial revolution, but will also result in thousands of job losses.

The decision by Indian-owned Tata Steel to transition the huge site to an electric arc furnace steel-making operation, is set against a backdrop of a global oversupply of steel and a pressing need to address climate change and achieving º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and net-zero targets.

Tata has also been disadvantaged, compared to some European competitors, on º£½ÇÊÓÆµ energy costs. With Chinese-owned British Steel having already confirmed a move away from primary steel production to arc furnaces, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ next year faces the prospect of being the world's only major economy without capacity to make steel for scratch.

Electric Arc furnaces will not make up in the short-term for the loss of primary steelmaking production capacity at and Scunthorpe. Steel is a strategic asset for any nation and a vital economic ‘building block.' The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ will become more dependent on imported steel, with all the geopolitical risk that entails in an increasingly trade protectionist and conflict driven world.

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The unions were hoping for a longer transition at Port Talbot to arc furnaces with the continuation of a single blast furnace operation (No 4) up to 2032. Tata concluded that was not a viable option, incurring an estimated extra cost of £650m

It ruled out maintaining the two blast furnaces and reducing emissions through the use of hydrogen. In Europe a number of plants are investing in hydrogen solutions to power virgin steel making. That would have required more than the £1.2bn - of which £500m has been committed by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government- investment that Tata has committed to moving Port Talbot to an arc furnace operation - which will make steel for scrap steel.