@@exterminator4808 British workers lose their jobs. It's one thing to be business orientated but the plant is still viable and this could have been prevented.
@@AluminumOxide government gave them £500 million. Energy costs, Chinese steel produced at a fraction of the cost . Even the Dutch plant is over capacity.
@@AluminumOxide unfortunely it is through a massive lack on investment at Port Talbot and other downstream sites. Very little has been modernised creating and inefficient steel making process. You have to stay ahead of the curve and Tata have let it rot.
Net zero = job losses = low no skilled jobs or redundancy is their future and a drop in living standards. TATA will screw these guys , they look in denial ! They are complicit in their own demise . It must be like attending your own funeral. Its very sad to see.
This is a brilliant step for the UK As making steel in the UK produces lots of CO2 And once we have stopped all farming and manufacturing in the UK we can achieve net zero As we all know that importing stuff means we have no CO2 in a column on a spreadsheet And if you want to look at the total CO2 then you are FAR RIGHT
Just one crucial question for TATA NOTHING has been said about your present customers and your sister plant at Trostre ? . I think its unlikely that the EA plant will be built. I hope I am wrong, but I smell a rat.
We have already secured steel substrate - slabs and coils - to fulfil our order book, and work has already begun to prepare for the EAF build. You can find out more in the Green Steel Future video playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLETTLU0iK3hP8RLJs-cEDJHAD1a9x6f0h or by visiting www.greensteelfuture.com.
Dean Cartwright went into a bit more detail during the previous video: ruclips.net/video/oZEv1d66tJ0/видео.html. We will also be covering the BF4 closure in September so can go into more depth then, and also touch upon the learnings from the BF5 shutdown. Thanks for watching.
No, Blast Furnace 5 wasn't salamander tapped at the end of this process. It was tapped during the 2018 life extension project, which you can watch here: ruclips.net/p/PLETTLU0iK3hOhqq7wR91ZHYVDZkFx_nqz.
Take it apart carefully lads because it will be up and running in India in a few years as will the other furnace .
So what? What's the issue with that, if the BF is still usable?
@@exterminator4808 British workers lose their jobs. It's one thing to be business orientated but the plant is still viable and this could have been prevented.
@@MrNinjaFish "Plant is still viable" apparently not as per TATA Steel management.
@@exterminator4808 what do they know?
@@MrNinjaFish How to run steel plants. And when to shut down loss making ones.
Very sad to see British jobs being destroyed by this net zero nonsense
Will the old equipment be going into the new furnace?
India
It hasn't been announced yet, but where we can, we will be recycling steel in the electric arc furnace.
Ffs tata. Well done on destroying our steel industry.
Unfortunately it’s not their fault, it’s the government and economic climate
It's a business, it will be run like a business.
@@AluminumOxide government gave them £500 million. Energy costs, Chinese steel produced at a fraction of the cost . Even the Dutch plant is over capacity.
@@AluminumOxide unfortunely it is through a massive lack on investment at Port Talbot and other downstream sites. Very little has been modernised creating and inefficient steel making process. You have to stay ahead of the curve and Tata have let it rot.
Net zero = job losses = low no skilled jobs or redundancy is their future and a drop in living standards. TATA will screw these guys , they look in denial ! They are complicit in their own demise . It must be like attending your own funeral. Its very sad to see.
This is a brilliant step for the UK
As making steel in the UK produces lots of CO2
And once we have stopped all farming and manufacturing in the UK we can achieve net zero
As we all know that importing stuff means we have no CO2 in a column on a spreadsheet
And if you want to look at the total CO2 then you are FAR RIGHT
net 0 mean 0 jobs. Revolt.
Just one crucial question for TATA NOTHING has been said about your present customers and your sister plant at Trostre ? . I think its unlikely that the EA plant will be built. I hope I am wrong, but I smell a rat.
We have already secured steel substrate - slabs and coils - to fulfil our order book, and work has already begun to prepare for the EAF build.
You can find out more in the Green Steel Future video playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLETTLU0iK3hP8RLJs-cEDJHAD1a9x6f0h or by visiting www.greensteelfuture.com.
No explanation of the technical steps involved?
Dean Cartwright went into a bit more detail during the previous video: ruclips.net/video/oZEv1d66tJ0/видео.html. We will also be covering the BF4 closure in September so can go into more depth then, and also touch upon the learnings from the BF5 shutdown. Thanks for watching.
@@TataSteelUK Thank you!
Did they salamander tap this at the end?
No, Blast Furnace 5 wasn't salamander tapped at the end of this process. It was tapped during the 2018 life extension project, which you can watch here: ruclips.net/p/PLETTLU0iK3hOhqq7wR91ZHYVDZkFx_nqz.
@@TataSteelUK so if it isnt salamander tapped is there still iron at the bottom of the furnace? That will set solid?
That's right. The team cast as much as iron as possible, but a small amount will have been left as the furnace wasn't salamander tapped.