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Tata Steel

Despite this, the company will continue restructuring at the British enterprise

Steelmaker Tata Steel says it will continue to close heavy assets and restructure at its Port Talbot facility, despite concerns that the upcoming UK general election could jeopardize its £1.25 billion investment plans. This is stated in the company’s message.

As noted, Tata Steel is concerned about the relevant reports in the British media that there is a risk to investment due to political differences expressed by the Conservative and Labor parties during the current election period.

“We urge and ask the current and future governments after the election to honor and protect the agreed terms of the £500 million support package for the electric arc furnace project announced in September 2023,” the company said.

Tata Steel notes that Port Talbot’s current heavy end assets are approaching the end of their useful life, “are operationally unstable and are resulting in unacceptable financial losses.” In particular, the coke oven batteries at the plant were closed in March this year.

«The proposed grant funding from the UK government is for the construction of a new EAF, which is critical to securing long-term steel supplies for Tata Steel’s UK processing assets and protecting 5,000 jobs at various sites in the UK. It is not related to the current financial losses and instability of the existing heavy steel assets, the closure of which is ongoing and unchanged,” the company said.

Tata Steel notes that further political uncertainty over the timing and form of the grant will put the EAF project and the long-term future of steel production at the plant at significant risk.

Port Talbot’s two blast furnaces, No. 5 and No. 4, are scheduled to be shut down by the end of June and the end of September, respectively. The UK general election is scheduled for July 4.

Earlier, during a visit to the plant, Labour MPs again called on Tata Steel to wait until they are in the government before closing the blast furnaces in Port Talbot so that new negotiations can be held. They hope that the company will accept the union’s plan to keep one blast furnace in operation.

At the same time, the UK Steel industry association has published a new election manifesto calling for policies aimed at leveling the playing field and increasing the competitiveness of the British steel industry, Kallanish writes.

“Our industry is crucial to the future of the country and we should not be importing nearly 70% of the steel we use in the UK from overseas,” said UK Steel CEO Gareth Stace.

The Association has outlined seven key policy areas to support steelmakers. These include, in particular, ensuring competitive electricity prices, scrap recycling opportunities, decarbonization through government-industry partnerships, and investments in green steel production.

As GMK Center reported earlier, traders predict that the price of carbon credits in the UK will rise. They expect the future government to introduce stricter climate policies against major polluters.