When struggling industries undergo restructuring, communities face complex trade-offs between economic modernization and workforce preservation, with government incentives playing a crucial role in determining the future of industrial assets and their impact on local employment.
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Whyalla community cautiously optimistic about steelworks sequel | ABC NEWSAjouté :
A promise of hope for a city looking for certainty. The Premier's announcement that two final bidders have been chosen in the steelworks sale process.
>> Those two are M Resources and Jindal.
>> The ABC has spoken with Matt Latimore, the founder of Queensland-based mining company M Resources.
>> Yeah, this is about securing sovereign steel making in Australian hands.
>> Federal and state governments have promised 1.9 billion dollars to upgrade the plant as an incentive to find a buyer. The financially stricken business was placed into administration in February last year, the second administration for the steelworks in under a decade.
M Resources says, if successful, it will replace Whyalla's aging blast furnace, which has been offline since early April, with a new electric arc furnace and will grow mining operations.
>> That's a huge opportunity to expand that iron ore with the using the existing infrastructure that's in place there to do more.
>> While Jindal Steel is M Resources' major threat, BlueScope, Australia's largest steelmaker, can also make a final offer before the sale. The ongoing shutdown of the blast furnace is adding an extra layer of complexity to the sale process, but long-term contingencies are being put in place to make sure that steel can continue to be made in Whyalla even with the furnace out of action.
>> As long as we've got orders and they can find a supplier of billets and slabs, then the rolling mill still will produce, which is, you know, the rail and structural steel that we make.
>> So, while potentially importing iron could keep steelmakers employed, blast furnace workers face greater uncertainty.
>> Everyone's quite clear that modernization does mean less people on the ground.
It's just a fact of life.
>> Those numbers are still to be totally refined in terms of exactly how many workers will be required for the transition.
>> So far, the steel works administration has cost in excess of $700 million, and a further top-up is likely in the state budget. Contractor Chris Feuster says the community needs to be kept better informed.
>> Where's the information that I can hang my hat that something good's going to come out of this?
>> But others remain more hopeful.
>> This time we've got governments, two governments, state and federal, aware of the importance of steel making within Australia.
Aware of how Whyalla must be saved, not just for Whyalla, it's for the the benefit of the whole nation.
>> A new owner is expected to be announced by the end of the year.
James Wakelin, ABC News.
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