The promise of a green steel revolution in South Wales has hit a snag. Tata Steel’s £1.25bn electric arc furnace, the cornerstone of the UK’s plan to retain sovereign steelmaking capacity, is facing a critical delay due to electrical grid connection issues. Sources close to the project confirm that the necessary grid upgrades to power the massive furnace will not be completed on time, pushing back the start of operations from late 2025 to at least mid-2026. For the 2,500 workers at the Port Talbot site, and the thousands more in the supply chain, this delay is more than a technical glitch. It is a blow to the region’s industrial heartland and a stark reminder of the fragility of the UK’s industrial strategy.
The furnace is supposed to replace the aging blast furnaces, cutting carbon emissions by 5 million tonnes a year. But without a firm timeline for grid connection, the plant will have to rely on imported steel or keep the old furnaces running, both costly options. The government has pledged £500m towards the project, but the delay raises questions about the due diligence performed by both Tata and the state. Why was the grid capacity issue not flagged earlier? The UK’s electricity network, already creaking under the strain of renewables and heat pumps, was not ready for a single industrial gigawatt-scale user.
For the workers, many of whom have already been through redundancy rounds, this uncertainty is agonising. The union leaders I spoke to are furious. “They told us this was the future, the save of steelmaking in Wales,” said a GMB representative. “Now we find out the plug hasn’t even been fitted. It’s a farce.” The delay also undermines the government’s rhetoric on “industrial sovereignty”. If we cannot even connect a new furnace to the grid, how can we compete with subsidised Chinese steel or German gigafactories?
The ripple effects go beyond Port Talbot. The UK imports about 40% of its steel, a vulnerability exposed by the war in Ukraine. Every delay in domestic production strengthens the case for protectionism, but also risks making British manufacturing uncompetitive. The price of steel for construction, cars, and infrastructure will inevitably rise if the furnace is delayed. That cost will be passed on to consumers already squeezed by high inflation.
Tata insists the project is not cancelled, just postponed. But in the world of heavy industry, delays are often deadly. If the grid connection costs spiral or if Tata’s patience wears thin, the furnace could be scrapped entirely. That would be a catastrophe for Welsh steel communities already betrayed by the closure of the strip mill at Llanwern.
The government must act urgently to fast-track grid upgrades and guarantee the timeline. Otherwise, this is another chapter in the slow decline of British industry. The workers at Port Talbot deserve better than a half-built promise.








