Nippon Steel fight points to industry's uncertain future in Pennsylvania

nippon steel fight points to industry's uncertain future in pennsylvania

The Edgar Thomson steel plant in Braddock, Pennsylvania, which has been producing since 1875, would go to Nippon Steel under a proposed buyout of United States Steel

Nippon Steel's proposed acquisition of United States Steel has been a source of unease in Pittsburgh, where the metal once dominated the economy and still looms large in the collective psyche.

Critics such as the United Steelworkers (USW) see the transaction as the latest threat to come along in a years-long struggle to keep the industry alive after plant closures in 1970s and 1980s battered the American rustbelt.

nippon steel fight points to industry's uncertain future in pennsylvania

Bernie Hall, the District 10 Director for the United Steelworkers, outside the US Steel Mon Valley Works Edgar Thomson Plant in Braddock, Pennsylvania

"There's just so much history here and a lot of pride that comes with that," said the USW's Bernie Hall, a 4th generation metals worker. "It wouldn't be western Pennsylvania without steel."

nippon steel fight points to industry's uncertain future in pennsylvania

Edward Stankowski, Jr., a former steelworker, stands on the Hot Metal Bridge above the Monongahela River, a waterway once teeming with iron ore and coal barges for Pittsburgh steel mills

In December, US Steel sealed a $14.9 billion deal to sell itself to Japan's Nippon Steel, which has promised investments to keep Pennsylvania factories competitive with foreign producers and newer "mini mills" in the American South that are less taxing on the environment.

But Hall, head of the Pennsylvania chapter for the USW, said the Japanese company had been evasive about specific plans for Pittsburgh-region plants in an area called the Mon Valley, the earliest of which dates to 1875.

Both President Joe Biden and challenger Donald Trump have vowed to annul the deal as the two compete for blue-collar votes, putting the transaction into limbo, probably until after the November election at least.

At stake are the Pittsburgh region's last remaining steel factories, located just outside the city.

- City transformed -

For most Americans, Pittsburgh remains virtually synonymous with steel, partly owing to the prominence of the Pittsburgh Steelers American football team.

But the complexion of a metropolis once known as the Smoky City changed fundamentally after the last plants shuttered in the 1980s.

Steel "is still part of our identity, but we're disconnected from that identity," said former steelworker Edward Stankowski Jr., whose memoir "Memory of Steel" details his exit from the industry with thousands of others in the early 1980s.

Stankowski, whose childhood Pittsburgh home looked out onto steel plants, started in the industry out of high school in the 1970s when many young men viewed the job as a ticket to the middle class, trading hard labor in a hazardous setting for good wages and a solid retirement.

nippon steel fight points to industry's uncertain future in pennsylvania

The US Steel Mon Valley Works Clairton Plant is situated along the Monongahela River in Clairton, Pennsylvania

The land where Stankowski's factory once stood in Pittsburgh's South Side has been repurposed and now includes apartments named "Hot Metal Flats" and a Cheesecake Factory restaurant.

"I do not miss it," said Stankowski, who went to university after leaving steel and is now a professor at La Roche University. "I like having clean air. I like having clean water."

Steel was well suited to western Pennsylvania, a region with waterways and an abundant supply of coal, but "there's been a fundamental, almost tectonic shift in the geography of steel," said regional economist Chris Briem of the University of Pittsburgh.

The Mon Valley plants "have been around a long time," Briem said. "If they don't get a lot of new reinvestment, they probably won't be competitive much longer."

Locals see symbolism in the renaming of US Steel tower downtown as the UPMC building after the region's biggest employer, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

- Long-term commitment? -

Once owned by Andrew Carnegie, the Edgar Thomson plant in Braddock is one of three western Pennsylvania factories that US Steel manages together with a fourth plant in eastern Pennsylvania in an operation known as "Mon Valley Works."

Nippon has promised to keep the plants open and invest $1.4 billion in USW-represented facilities through 2026 when the current labor contract expires. The company has also vowed to keep US Steel's 1,000-worker office in downtown Pittsburgh.

"You cannot tell the story of US Steel without Pennsylvania playing a leading role, and Nippon Steel will keep it that way," Nippon vice chairman Takahiro Mori wrote in a June 9 op ed in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette.

Nippon has hinted that odds for US approval could improve after November. Backers of the transaction argue that US Steel could be broken up if the deal dies, adding more uncertainty to US Steel's 3,000 hourly workers in Pennsylvania.

But the USW says Nippon's plans are vague and give the company an out in a downturn.

"They're saying they're going to invest in the plants," Hall said. "What does that mean?"

Workers want a sign that whoever runs Mon Valley "is interested in running these mills for the long-term and really investing in this community," Hall said. "That's exactly what they're not hearing from either Nippon or US Steel."

Some Mon Valley workers interviewed by AFP slammed the deal as a money grab by US Steel management, expressing fear about their jobs. But others are open to it.

Alex Barna, a machinist at the West Mifflin plan, described himself as "on the fence" as he weighs his hopes and worries, saying of Nippon, "they might be in it for the long haul."

jmb/dw

OTHER NEWS

5 hrs ago

Frustrated Kiambu Mother Takes Drastic Step to Find Employment

5 hrs ago

2 High-Yielding Healthcare Stocks to Buy With $1,000 in July

6 hrs ago

Abians jubilate as government postpones restrictions on tricycles, motorcycles

6 hrs ago

Finance Bill 2024: List of MPs who've asked for forgiveness after voting for bill

6 hrs ago

KNCHR: At least 39 dead, 361 injured due to ongoing protests

6 hrs ago

How to Get Your New Generation Kenyan Car Number Plate

6 hrs ago

F1 2025 driver line-up: Who’s on the Formula 1 grid next year?

6 hrs ago

France's EDF to redraft small modular reactor design amid cost, technology concerns

6 hrs ago

Nigeria’s active Internet subscribers increase to 164.4m in Q1 2024

6 hrs ago

France's far-right makes gains in southeast, fails to make a breakthrough in Paris

6 hrs ago

'Roaring Kitty' is sued for alleged GameStop manipulation

6 hrs ago

England's Bland beats Japan's Fujita in playoff to win US Senior Open

6 hrs ago

5 Key Signs You Should Worry About Your Investments in an Election Year

6 hrs ago

Megacaps boost Nasdaq in choppy trade, jobs data in focus

6 hrs ago

ECB not in a hurry to cut rates further, Lagarde says

6 hrs ago

Ukraine eyes debt deal before deadline, seeks to add GDP warrants, sources say

6 hrs ago

DSV, CVC Seen as Lead Contenders for Schenker After Maersk Drops

6 hrs ago

I’m a Lawyer: This Is How Much I Made in My First Job and How Much I Make Now

6 hrs ago

Koenigsegg Just Broke Its Own 0-250-0 MPH Record

6 hrs ago

Why I bought a Tesla Cybertruck

6 hrs ago

Trump ally Steve Bannon begins 4-month prison sentence

6 hrs ago

The Biggest Mistake You Are Making When Ordering From KFC

6 hrs ago

Putin's Forces Crush Ukrainian Defences: 4 Major Victories in Kharkiv & Donetsk in Just 48 Hours!

6 hrs ago

Putin's Fear Spooks Zelensky: Ukraine Plans New Peace Deal to End the war before 2025

6 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Gary Neville blames Belgium player after France’s 1-0 win

6 hrs ago

'Les Basketteuses de Bamako': When basketball, art meet

6 hrs ago

Andretti rules out adding part-time IndyCar entry for Pourchaire

6 hrs ago

Transfer: Man Utd agree deal with Newcastle for Dan Ashworth

7 hrs ago

England midfielder Barkley returns to Aston Villa

7 hrs ago

London stocks steady as housebuilders offer support, election in focus

7 hrs ago

12 Coolest Gadgets on Amazon you can Buy Right now #gadgets #coolgadgets #amazon #tech

7 hrs ago

Mauritania President Ghazouani wins re-election

7 hrs ago

Intel Stock Is Down, but Is It Also Out?

7 hrs ago

European stocks rise after first round of French vote

7 hrs ago

You won’t return to Senate in 2027 – Wike threatens FCT Senator, Kingibe

7 hrs ago

CDK expects all dealers to be live by early July 4

7 hrs ago

Report: Drew Eubanks agrees to 2-year deal with Jazz

7 hrs ago

Nanny Rosie's daughter thanks her Lebanese boss for letting return home safely: "Thanks for gifts"

7 hrs ago

Ghana Football Awards: Lookman named Africa’s Best Player

7 hrs ago

Looking for a Home-Run Artificial Intelligence (AI) Investment? Consider This AI Stock That Nvidia Is Investing In.