Arab Times

Port Talbot closure to hit UK manufactur­ing

Move could create logistical headache for car industry

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The closure of Tata Steel’s operations in Britain would leave a hole in manufactur­ers’ supply chains, dealing a blow to thousands of smaller firms across the country and creating a logistical headache for the car industry.

India’s Tata Steel, Britain’s biggest producer, put all of its operations up for sale, including the country’s largest steelworks at Port Talbot which is losing $1.4 million a day due to depressed steel prices and high costs.

As the government searches for a new buyer, some of Tata’s customers are already looking for new sources of steel which is used in everything from car roofs to Heinz baked bean cans, cladding on Ikea buildings and some of the country’s coins.

While bigger names have the luxury of a global supply chain to fall back on, smaller companies — which account for around 95 percent of British manufactur­ing firms — face a tougher task if Port Talbot in south Wales closes.

Tata sells around half of its products into the domestic market, the firm said in 2014.

“It would be entirely undesirabl­e from my point of view”, said Tony Mullins, executive chairman of QRL Radiators Group, a Tata Steel customer that makes heating radiators near the Welsh town of Newport, employing around 150 staff.

Looking abroad for steel would leave firms like QRL that use British steel exposed to swings in the currency exchange rate and higher transporta­tion costs. It might also need to hold more stock if it is buying from the other side of the world, having an impact on working capital.

“We have to be competitiv­e, we have to produce quality products, and historical­ly with Tata that has been possible for us”, Mullins said.

Britain, the birthplace of the modern steel industry, has been struggling to compete since its post-war heyday and has shed thousands of jobs in recent years.

Since 2001 imported supplies have met more than half of its domestic demand, according to the Internatio­nal Steel Statistics Bureau (ISSB), as local producers struggled with high energy costs, green taxes and fierce competitio­n.

Germany is the biggest foreign supplier of steel to British manufactur­ers and constructi­on firms, followed by China, Spain, Belgium and the Netherland­s, the ISSB said.

Problem

The government maintains that the main problem is the collapse in the price of steel. China has flooded European markets with relatively cheap steel as a result of its own falling demand.

Britain imported 826,000 tonnes of Chinese steel in 2015, up from 361,000 two years earlier, according to industry data.

According to the ISSB, China has produced more steel in the last three years than Britain has since the industrial revolution. Those British steelmaker­s that remain have been kept going by local manufactur­ers, a resurgent car industry and foreign demand.

“Hot-rolled coil is produced (at Port Talbot) and that predominat­ely goes into the automotive sector ... that’s the bodywork”, Dominic King, head of policy and representa­tion at industry group UK Steel, told Reuters.

Five carmakers built almost 99 percent of Britain’s 1.6 million cars last year and all source steel from Port Talbot, with some already looking for alternativ­es should the site shut.

The country’s biggest carmaker Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), which made just under a third of national output last year, gets around 30 percent of its steel from the site while Nissan, which operates Britain’s biggest single car plant in northern England, buys 45 percent from there.

Showing the cost constraint­s within the industry, John Leech, who heads up the automotive team at KPMG and works with some of the country’s biggest carmakers, said JLR could not afford to give preferenti­al treatment to a more expensive product even though it is owned by Tata Motors — part of the same family of companies as Tata Steel.

“To compete against BMW and Mercedes, Jaguar Land Rover needs to makes sure its cars are cost-competitiv­e and that means using materials that are sourced cheaply and competitiv­ely.”

JLR said: “Like all other independen­t businesses, we make our own purchasing decisions based on the right commercial reasons.” The firm said it continued to use Tata Steel and did not see any short term impact on its business.

A spokesman at General Motorsowne­d Vauxhall, which uses Tata’s highstreng­th lightweigh­t steel in its Astra hatchback model said it was “considerin­g the scenario of UK steel plant closures on supply sources”.

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