º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinion

The urgent action needed to save steelmaking at Port Talbot - MP Stephen Kinnock

Local MP Stephen Kinnock has called on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government to deliver on a series of promised support measures

Port Talbot steelworks(Image: Rob Melen)

In 2016 I went to India as part of a Community Union-led delegation to meet Tata Steel’s management in the midst of a crisis that nearly led to the loss of 4,000 jobs in Port Talbot.

Our community fought tooth and nail to make Tata recognise that these are real people with families to look after, not just numbers on a spreadsheet.

The result? Tata Steel decided against closing or selling the business, the workforce showed the sacrifice that they were prepared to make by voting for the divestment of the pension scheme, and, in return, Tata Steel put forward a substantial investment plan and promised there would not be a single compulsory redundancy in the coming years.

But now it seems that we are in danger of being back in 2016 all over again.

In November, Tata Steel announced that 3,000 jobs would be axed across their European operations, and now the chairman of Tata Sons, the holding company that controls the Tata empire, has told the Sunday Times: “I need to get to a situation where at least the plant is self-sustaining. We can’t have a situation where India keeps funding the losses just to keep it going.”

This is extremely disappointing. Our Port Talbot steelworks is suffering from decades of under-investment.

Projects such as the recent renovation by Tata of Blast Furnace 5 are of course very welcome, but it takes time for these investments to bear fruit.

Our steelworkers have shown tremendous strength, patience, courage and resilience through these difficult times.