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Scunthorpe’s Blast Furnace Jobs at Risk in Green Steel Push

by admin477351

Thousands of jobs at British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant are at risk as the government throws its weight behind a green-steel plan that would phase out traditional blast furnaces. Business Secretary Peter Kyle has endorsed a switch to electric arc furnaces (EAFs), a cleaner technology that requires a smaller workforce.
The move is part of a new steel strategy, set for a December release, designed to secure the long-term future of the state-controlled plant and meet national net-zero emissions targets. The plant’s blast furnaces are a major source of CO2 pollution.
However, steelworkers and unions are looking at the plan with extreme caution. The switch to EAFs at Tata Steel in Port Talbot last year was followed by 2,500 job cuts, a precedent that is causing significant anxiety among the Scunthorpe workforce.
Alasdair McDiarmid of the Community union said that while a “just transition” is welcome, it must be managed properly. Beyond jobs, the union is also fighting to “maintain primary steelmaking capacity” in the UK, as EAFs primarily melt scrap, not iron ore.
The government, which took control of the plant in April to save it from closure, is now caught between its climate goals, its previous pledges to protect primary steelmaking, and the fate of thousands of workers. It is also facing dwindling funds, as “hundreds of millions” have already been spent just to keep the plant’s lights on.

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