
Tata Steel Nederland reports higher production, deliveries
Tata Steel Netherlands has reported a rise in steel production and deliveries in its third fiscal quarter and nine months of the 2025 fiscal year (FY25), Kallanish notes from its provisional results filing.
Liquid steel production for the Netherlands was at 1.76 million tonnes in the third, December quarter (Q3), up quarter-on-quarter from 1.66mt, and year-on-year from 1.19mt. Delivery volumes saw a small increase to 1.53mt, from 1.5mt the previous quarter, and y-o-y from 1.3mt.
Its nine-month production volumes were at 5.12mt, up 54% from 3.32mt for the same period one year earlier, while deliveries rose to 4.5mt from 3.89mt. Tata says the 16% y-o-y increase is primarily due to the higher production.
Tata Steel notes its Netherlands delivery figures include volumes shipped to Tata’s UK operations of 120,000t.
For Tata Steel UK (TSUK), production and delivery volumes were heavily impacted by the closure of steelmaking at Port Talbot on 30 September, reducing Q3 liquid steel output to zero.
“Following closure of the blast furnaces at the end of 2QFY25, TSUK has successfully reconfigured its supply chain to continue servicing customers via downstream processing of purchased substrate,” the firm says in the filing.
Q3 deliveries stood at 560,000t, down q-o-q from 630,000t and y-o-y from 640,000t.
Nine-month production amounted to 1.07mt, down y-o-y from 2.33mt in the same period of FY24, while deliveries were at 1.87mt, slumping from 2.11mt one year previously, which the company says were adversely impacted by subdued demand dynamics.
TSUK is to construct an electric arc furnace as part of its £1.25 billion investment in the Port Talbot site, £500 million ($626m) of which comes from a grant funding agreement with the UK government.
Carrie Bone UK

Tata Steel relights BF in IJmuiden
Tata Steel’s BF6 was idled late in March 2023 for maintenance work. The restart, however, was postponed several times because of “technical issues.”
“[The relining of BF6] is a large project and has a number of third-party dependencies in terms of services and equipment,” a Tata Steel spokesperson said on October 23. “As a result of certain delays and delivery issues from third parties, we have had to make changes to the schedule of the project.”
The furnace has now been finally reignited, however.
“A few days ago,” the spokesperson said on January 31, “we began the start-up process on BF6. Step by step, we are working toward a full ramp-up in the production of hot pig iron.”
Several sources familiar with the matter said that the BF in IJmuiden was restarted on January 29.
The IJmuiden steelworks can produce 6 million tonnes per year of pig iron from two BFs. BF6 has capacity for 2.5 million tpy of that total volume.
Tata Steel IJmuiden has capacity for 7.5 million tpy of crude steel, according to Fastmarkets’ company information. The site produces hot-rolled, cold-rolled, hot-dipped galvanized and pre-painted coils as well as tin-plated products.
Market concerns
Market sources were worried that, if more steelmaking capacities were brought back online in the first quarter of 2024, this might hamper the fragile uptrend in the EU flat steel market.
Prices for flat steel in Europe have been picking up in January, primarily driven by reduced supply resulting from output cuts and some limited restocking activity, although end-user demand remained low.
“The acute price rise [in HRC] is entirely supply-driven,” a source in Northern Europe said.
Fastmarkets calculated its daily steel hot-rolled coil index, domestic, exw Northern Europe, at €760.63 ($824.13) per tonne on January 31, up by €3.75 per tonne from €756.88 per tonne on January 30.
The index was also up by €13.96 per tonne week on week and by €65.13 per tonne month on month.
Earlier this month, Salzgitter restarted its BF “A” at Flachstahl in Germany after a four-month outage.
Published by: Julia Bolotova