International industrials and metals group, Liberty House, today has announced it will create 300 new production jobs, alongside the 1,700 jobs it has secured after assuming control of Tata Specialist Steels business in South Yorkshire.
The news came as Liberty House formally completed the £100m deal to acquire the Speciality Steels division of Tata Steel UK – protecting the jobs of 1,700 existing staff at three major sites at Rotherham, Stocksbridge and Brinsworth in South Yorkshire, smaller sites in Bolton, Lancashire and Wednesbury in the West Midlands, and two distribution centres in China.
Speciality Steels produces a range of high-value steels used in the manufacture of vehicles, aircraft, industrial machinery, and equipment for the oil and gas industry.
Liberty House has also said that it will be investing up to an additional £20m in new plant and equipment in the first year alone to boost competitiveness and secure international market leadership for the business, which is being relaunched as Liberty Speciality Steels.
The business expects to increase output substantially at the electric arc furnaces, casting shop and bar mill in Rotherham, with bigger plans across the wider speciality business in the years ahead.
Production from the arc furnaces is expected to rise to more than a million tonnes a year and there are plans for the bar mill to roll over 400,000 tonnes a year. Also, the business seeks to grow its position in aerospace markets, utilising recent capital investments at Stocksbridge and investing in additional capacity and new technology.
The acquisition marks a major step forward for Liberty’s GREENSTEEL strategy as it gives the group the largest arc furnace capacity in the UK, a key component in its plan to increase low-carbon steel production based on recycling metal in furnaces powered by renewable energy.
As part of its GREENSTEEL strategy, Liberty’s sister company SIMEC is actively considering investment in bio-diesel power generation at Speciality Steel sites.
The Speciality Steels businesses will also complement Liberty’s engineering operations in the West Midlands which already use steel from these plants to make precision products. Liberty expects to assess further downstream investment to make greater use of the products from Speciality Steels to boost manufacturing in the UK.
Executive chairman of Liberty House, Sanjeev Gupta explained: “The Speciality Steels business is a global leader in its field, with a highly-skilled and well-motivated workforce and we are eager to invest so it can grow and achieve its full potential.
“Today marks a step change for the Liberty House Group because we are taking on strategically important capacity that will drive expansion in the years ahead. It will help us achieve our GREENSTEEL vision and facilitate investment in engineering products, thereby reducing the supply-chain gaps in the UK, especially in automotive and aerospace sectors.”
“By investing to acquire Speciality Steels we are casting a big vote of confidence in the future of British industry. With the right business model and an innovative approach, the UK steel and engineering sectors can recover and thrive. The Government is now pursuing a new post-Brexit industrial strategy and steel must be at the heart of that strategy,” he added.
Jon Bolton, who has been appointed chief executive of Liberty Speciality Steels, explained that the business already had a strong market reputation thanks to a combination of advanced equipment capability and a skilled and motivated workforce.
He noted: “Through increased output and improved positions in the UK, North American and EU markets, the business can improve its competitiveness and re-establish itself as a global force in the supply of engineering steels.”
The acquisition will make Liberty one of the largest steel and engineering employers in the UK with more than 4,500 workers.