Llanwern steelworks

Llanwern steelworks is located in Llanwern, east of the City of Newport, South Wales.

View of part of Llanwern steelworks
Steel coil and slab for Llanwern steelworks, being hauled by EWS Class 66
Entrance to Llanwern steelworks

History

Built for Richard Thomas & Baldwins Ltd, the works was originally referred to locally as "The RTB", before being called Spencer Works and later Llanwern under British Steel Corporation. The steelworks site is alongside the South Wales Main Line east of Newport, offering excellent rail transport for the works.

It was the first oxygen-blown integrated steelworks in Britain when it opened in 1962.[1] The hot strip mill pioneered the first successful use of a computer for complete mill control.[2] [3]

The steelworks were built on grassland and wetland that local schoolchildren used to roam through on their way to the sea, and which provided a varied habitat for reptiles, amphibians, insects, mammals and birds.

Having won an open internal competition in the 1990s with the Ravenscraig steelworks to become British Steel's leading hot strip mill, in the efforts to increase group and site efficiency in 2001 steelmaking ceased at the site with the loss of 1300 jobs. With hot steel slab now imported by rail from the sister Port Talbot steelworks, the mothballed "heavy end" of the Llanwern works was resultantly demolished in 2004.[4]

In January 2009, Corus announced that it was mothballing the hot strip mill, with the loss of over 500 jobs.[5] In August 2009 Corus announced that the hot strip mill would resume operations.[6] Subsequent problems caused by the eurozone crisis forced the company to once again mothball the hot strip mill commencing 24 November 2011 with plans to re-open during late 2012. This stance was released to the press on 2 December 2011.[7]

Present

Tata's operations at Llanwern include a hot strip mill, two pickle lines, a cold strip mill and a hot dip galvanising line. The works rolls 1.5 million tonnes of steel coil per annum for automotive, construction and general engineering applications.[8]

Regeneration

A £115m renewal project called Glan Llyn, led by St. Modwen Properties PLC, is currently transforming the former steel-producing part of the Llanwern steelworks site. Started in 2004, the masterplan envisages 1.5m sq ft of employment-generating accommodation hosting 6,000 jobs, 4,000 new dwellings, community facilities and open space including 3 new lakes. Full completion is anticipated by 2026–28.

In 2017 it was announced that the Spanish railway rolling stock construction company Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles (CAF) would open a factory at Celtic Business Park (near the steelworks) to build trains primarily for the UK market, including Transport for Wales.

References

  1. The Welsh Academy Encyclopedia of Wales, University of Wales Press, 2008
  2. Aylen, J. (2004). "Megabytes for metals: Development of computer applications in the iron and steel industry" (PDF). Ironmaking & Steelmaking. Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining / Maney Publishing. 31 (6): 465–478. doi:10.1179/030192304225019324. ISSN 0301-9233. S2CID 53337246.
  3. Aylen, J., Natural experiments in innovation: radical adoption of computers and changes to physical and social technologies at Llanwern steelworks, South Wales (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 21 March 2012
  4. "Part of city history bites the dust", South Wales Argus, September 2004
  5. "Fears for over 1,100 Welsh steel jobs", new.bbc.co.uk, 26 January 2009
  6. "Llanwern steel mill to go back to work", South Wales Argus, 20 August 2009
  7. "Tata Steel to mothball hot strip mill at Llanwern, Newport", www.bbc.co.uk, 2 December 2011
  8. "Tata Steel : About us", www.tatasteeleurope.com, Llanwern works, archived from the original on 3 September 2014, retrieved 7 December 2016

Literature

  • Jost, H. P. (1964). "The planning and organization of lubrication for a new integrated iron and steel works". Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Conference Proceedings. 179 (1964): 287. doi:10.1243/PIME_CONF_1964_179_090_02., includes description of works c.1964

51.57536°N 2.89284°W / 51.57536; -2.89284

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