A new export contract worth tens of millions of pounds has given British Steel breathing room, but industry experts warn it is far from a solution to the fundamental problems facing the Scunthorpe steelworks. The deal to supply 36,000 tonnes of rail for Turkey’s Ankara–İzmir high-speed railway is significant, but daily losses of £1.2 million mean the pressure remains intense.
The agreement with ERG International Group will see British-made rail travel to Turkey for use on a 599km corridor that will transform travel in the region, cutting journey times and emissions. For British Steel, winning such a prestigious international contract is proof that the plant can compete on quality and delivery — but contracts must be matched by structural reforms to make the business sustainable.
On the operational side, the news has been unambiguously positive. Twenty-three new jobs have been created, and the Scunthorpe site has resumed 24-hour rail production for the first time in a decade. These are concrete markers of progress that reflect well on the workforce and management alike.
UK Export Finance supported the deal, and industry body UK Steel has praised the contract as “essential to underpinning a sustainable turnaround.” Its director general called for the government to go further, however — improving import safeguards and ensuring UK steel producers can compete on energy costs with their European and Asian counterparts.
With losses since the emergency takeover now totalling £359 million, and no permanent ownership arrangement yet in place, the question of British Steel’s future remains open. The Turkish deal is welcome, but as one analyst put it, what the plant needs is a strategy — not just a contract.