Tata Steel recently signed an
agreement to install a new pickling line at its Port Talbot site in Wales.
The steel industry leader’s latest move will offer 50% more capacity
than the existing line. According to the company’s announcement, the new
equipment will have an annual capacity of 1.8 million metric tons and will
employ up to 220 people during construction.
Tata
expects to commission the line in Q4 2027. They also stated that the previous
pickling line had an annual capacity of 1.2 million metric tons. Pickling lines
use acid baths to descale hot-rolled coil and remove other impurities before
the material undergoes cold rolling.
French
company Clecim will design and supply the mechanical process equipment for the
line, while a Swedish company will provide the electrification and automation
technology. With the pre-engineering phase completed, both companies are now
moving forward with detailed engineering.
The work is part of Tata
Steel’s £1.2 billion ($1.56 billion) project to transition Port Talbot to
green steelmaking by replacing its two blast furnaces and converter shop with
two electric arc furnaces, or EAFs.
Tata hopes to commission the
new furnaces by 2027, and expects they will have a listed crude steel capacity
of 3.5 million metric tons per year—more than 30% lower than the 5 million
metric tons previously produced via the blast furnace/basic oxygen furnace
route.
However,
in 2022, the plant produced less than half that volume, pouring just 2.2
million metric tons. Tata also shut down Port Talbot’s blast furnaces and
closed the converter shop in 2024. The
company planned to bring in slab from other sites to continue rolling
operations while replacement work on the hot end was underway.
In
addition to replacing the blast furnaces and basic oxygen converter with EAF
technology, other planned upgrades at
Port Talbot include installing the new pickling line, upgrading the continuous
slab caster and modernizing the hot strip mill.