Tata Steel: Port Talbot steelworkers rally ahead of industrial action

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By Huw ThomasBusiness correspondent, BBC Wales News

BBC Protestors in Port TalbotBBC

Protestors gathered in Port Talbot on Monday ahead of worker strikes

Workers are rallying in Port Talbot ahead of the first industrial action in the UK steel industry for 40 years.

From Tuesday, around 1,500 Unite members working for Tata Steel in Port Talbot and Llanwern will observe an overtime ban and “work to rule” – meaning refusing to do work that is optional in their contracts.

Tata said the industrial action was “unlawful” and it had offered workers “generous” redundancy packages.

The company called on Unite to suspend the action and return to discussions alongside other unions.

Members of Unite are holding a rally on Monday evening outside the entrance to the Port Talbot site – the UK’s largest steelworks – ahead of Tuesday’s industrial action.

Members of three unions have voted in favour of industrial action over Tata Steel’s proposals, but Unite is the only one to press ahead with its plans.

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said members were taking action “because they know the company’s claim that jobs cannot be retained in South Wales during the transition to green steel is a lie”.

Ms Graham said her members were “standing up and fighting for a better future”.

Reuters Tata's steelworks site in Port TalbotReuters

Tata Steel said its Port Talbot works was losing £1m a day

Jason Wyatt, an electrical engineer in Port Talbot, said he and colleagues were “fighting for our industry, we’re fighting for our communities, we’re fighting for the futures of the youngsters around here”.

“Regardless of what the impact is [of the protest], the agenda is to bring Tata back to the table to negotiate properly with us ,” he added.

“We need a different solution, we need a different transition to what is currently being proposed.

“We’re not going to stand by and be pushed into a corner and be bullied by them.”

Jason Wyatt

One of the striking workers, Jason Wyatt, says workers are “fighting for our communities”

About 2,800 Tata Steel workers will lose their jobs when the company closes both blast furnaces in Port Talbot by the end of September.

The company said the current operation was losing £1m a day and was no longer financially viable. Construction work will begin on a greener electric arc furnace in August 2025 which requires far fewer staff.

Despite Tata’s claim that the ballot was unlawful, the company would not confirm if it intended to pursue the matter in the courts.

In criticising Unite’s industrial action, Tata said it had raised issues with the union’s ballot.

Reuters A Unite banner in Port TalbotReuters

Workers are protesting against Tata Steel’s plans to cut 2,800 jobs

A Tata spokesperson said: “We have challenged the legality of their ballot process on multiple occasions and our position is that their industrial action is unlawful.

“Furthermore, through extensive negotiations with unions the company twice substantially improved our support offering for affected employees – the most generous package in our history – [and] we would have expected Unite to put this offer to their members.

“Having now received notice of Unite’s industrial action, we have regrettably reverted our employee support package to closer to our standard terms.”

The company called on Unite to “withdraw” its notice of industrial action and to return to discussions alongside the other unions.

Tata Steel plans to close the first of its two blast furnaces by the end of June, with the second to shut by the end of September.

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