Current:Home > FinanceTata Steel announces plans to cut 2,800 jobs in a blow to Welsh town built on steelmaking -AssetBase
Tata Steel announces plans to cut 2,800 jobs in a blow to Welsh town built on steelmaking
View
Date:2025-04-23 08:23:08
LONDON (AP) — Indian firm Tata Steel announced Friday it will close both blast furnaces at its plant in Port Talbot, Wales, eliminating 2,800 jobs, as part of plans to make its unprofitable U.K. operation leaner and greener.
Tata plans to switch from coal-fired blast furnaces to an electric arc furnace, which emits less carbon — and needs fewer workers — using a half-billion pound ($634 million) investment from the British government.
The company said the switch would “reverse more than a decade of losses and transition from the legacy blast furnaces to a more sustainable, green steel business.”
“The course we are putting forward is difficult, but we believe it is the right one,” Tata Steel Chief Executive T.V. Narendran said.
The company said it expects about 2,800 jobs will be eliminated, most in the next 18 months, with a further 300 at longer-term risk.
The news is a major blow to Port Talbot, a town of about 35,000 people whose economy has been built on the steel industry since the early 1900s.
Unions have called for one blast furnace to remain open while the electric one is built, which would have meant fewer job cuts. They say Tata rejected their proposal.
The Unite union said it would “use everything in its armory” to fight job losses, including potential strikes.
At its height in the 1960s, the Port Talbot steelworks employed around 20,000 people, before cheaper offerings from China and other countries hit production. More than 300,000 people worked in Britain’s steel industry in 1971; by 2021 it was about 26,000.
The steel industry now accounts for 0.1% of the British economy and 2.4% of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions, according to research by the House of Commons Library.
Tata warned in 2022 that its U.K. operations were under threat unless it secured government funding to help it move to less carbon-intensive electric arc furnaces.
Last year the U.K. government gave Tata up to 500 million pounds ($634 million) to make the Port Talbot steelworks greener. Tata says it is investing a further 750 million pounds ($950 million) in the project.
The company said switching to the electric furnace, which produces steel from scrap metal, would “secure most of (the plant’s) capability in terms of end products” while cutting its carbon emissions by about 85%.
The British government said the investment would “transform the site and protect thousands of jobs — both in Port Talbot and throughout the supply chain.” It said the move to electric furnaces would “secure a sustainable and competitive future for the U.K. steel sector.”
The GMB and Community unions, which both represent workers at Port Talbot, said “it’s unbelievable any government would give a company 500 million pounds to throw 3,000 workers on the scrapheap.”
The announcement is the latest blow to the economy in Wales, a former industrial heartland whose mines and mills have largely shut since the 1980s.
Even the Green Party in Wales criticized Tata’s decision, despite its environmental benefits.
“Wales knows only too well what happens when communities are abandoned by government and industries,” said its leader, Anthony Slaughter. “We saw it with the coal industry and now it is happening again with the steel industry.
“Decarbonization of industry is vital, but communities and people’s jobs must be protected,” he said.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Inside Clean Energy: Some EVs Now Pay for Themselves in a Year
- International Commission Votes to Allow Use of More Climate-Friendly Refrigerants in AC and Heat Pumps
- Inside Clean Energy: Flow Batteries Could Be a Big Part of Our Energy Storage Future. So What’s a Flow Battery?
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Police investigating after woman's remains found in 3 suitcases in Delray Beach
- Nature vs. nurture - what twin studies mean for economics
- Mazda, Toyota, Nissan, Tesla among 436,000 vehicles recalled. Check car recalls here.
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Wayfair’s 60% Off Back-to-School Sale: Best Deals on College Living Essentials from Bedding to Storage
Ranking
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- U.S. Starbucks workers join in a weeklong strike over stores not allowing Pride décor
- Traveling over the Fourth of July weekend? So is everyone else
- It's National Tequila Day 2023: See deals, recipes and drinks to try
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Environmentalists Fear a Massive New Plastics Plant Near Pittsburgh Will Worsen Pollution and Stimulate Fracking
- Ex-Starbucks manager awarded $25.6 million in case tied to arrests of 2 Black men
- TikTok Just Became a Go-To Source for Real-Time Videos of Hurricane Ian
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
The migrant match game
Home prices dip, Turkey's interest rate climbs, Amazon gets sued
Mission: Impossible's Hayley Atwell Slams “Invasive” Tom Cruise Romance Rumors
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Remember Reaganomics? Freakonomics? Now there's Bidenomics
Collin Gosselin Speaks Out About Life at Home With Mom Kate Gosselin Before Estrangement
Community and Climate Risk in a New England Village