Eastern Eye (UK)

Tata Steel warns of plant closure without UK aid

FIRM WANTS TO REPLACE TWO BLAST FURNACES WITH LESS CARBON INTENSIVE ONES

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INDIAN steel giant Tata Steel said last Friday (22) it could close its major plant at Port Talbot in Wales unless it receives British government aid to help decarbonis­e production.

“A transition to a greener steel plant is the intention that we have . . . But this is only possible with financial help from the government,” Tata Group chair Natarajan Chandrasek­aran told the Financial Times.

Chandrasek­aran said the group had been embroiled in two years of discussion­s on obtaining £1.5 billion from London and forecast an accord within 12 months.

But he added “without this, we will have to look at closures of sites,” including Port Talbot, Britain’s largest steelmakin­g site, which employs around half Tata’s UK workforce of 8,000.

The Community trade union, the largest at Tata Steel, slammed a “shocking situation” it said had emerged without any consultati­on. “The unions have been working with our experts exploring low carbon options that will protect our country’s steelmakin­g capacity, jobs and communitie­s. That process is unfinished, but Tata’s comments make a mockery of the company’s commitment­s to an open and transparen­t dialogue with the unions,” Community said.

The union called on the firm’s executives to “live up to their moral and social responsibi­lities to the workforce” and reach an accord with the government.

Unite union regional secretary Peter Hughes said no steelworks anywhere in the world had to date managed to decarbonis­e production without state aid.

Hughes added: “Steel is a strategic industry and must be central to the UK’s economic strategy.”

Tata is targeting carbon neutrality by 2050 and also wants to reduce CO2 emissions on its UK activities by 30 per cent by 2030.

The FT reported the company wanted the aid cash to part-fund the closure of two blast furnaces at Port Talbot and replace them with two less carbon intensive electric arc furnaces, a process costing an estimated £3bn. A UK government spokespers­on said: “Steel plays a critical role in all areas of the UK economy and Tata is a valued steel producer and significan­t employer in the UK.”

Tata Steel did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

A slide in steel demand during the pandemic had already fuelled concerns as to the Port Talbot plant’s long-term future after losses across two years came in at around a billion pounds. Last year, Tata Steel announced 1,000 job losses in the UK. The industry is seeing the pollution it generates bring legal troubles amid climate change as evidenced last February when Tata faced a Dutch criminal investigat­ion into alleged “intentiona­l and illegal” pollution of surface water at a plant outside Amsterdam.

 ?? ?? GREEN GOALS: Tata an reduc CO2 missions on its UK activities by 30 er t by 203
GREEN GOALS: Tata an reduc CO2 missions on its UK activities by 30 er t by 203

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