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ArcelorMittal will build a lower-emission electric boiler at Dunkirk

ArcelorMittal announced on Tuesday that it had decided to invest?1.3 billion euros ($1.55 billion), in order to build an electric furnace with lower emissions at its Dunkirk Steel Plant in France. This investment comes after the EU made steps to "protect" the sector.

ArcelorMittal, and other steelmakers in Europe, have not invested in low-carbon production because they say that such projects are unviable due to massive imports from the U.S. and tariffs placed on EU exports.

ArcelorMittal said, however, that the European Union plans to reduce steel import quotas and the introduction of a carbon tax scheme in January for imported industrial products had changed the outlook.

Alain Le Grix de la Salle is the president of ArcelorMittal France.

He told reporters that a new long-term contract for electricity with French utility EDF, effective January 1, had enabled the project to move forward, providing Dunkirk low-carbon, competitive power.

The furnace is expected to replace one of the existing blast furnaces at the site and produce 2,000,000 metric tons per year. According to ArcelorMittal, its emissions per ton will be three-times lower than those of Dunkirk's old blast furnaces.

The facility will be funded 50% by ArcelorMittal, and 50% through a French scheme to promote energy efficiency. The company stated that it is due to launch by 2029.

Emmanuel Macron, the French president, will visit the Dunkirk Steel Plant on Tuesday in order to celebrate the announcement. This is in contrast to the criticism that ArcelorMittal has received from opposition parties who have called for job cuts and nationalisation of its French plants.

The project has been scaled down from an earlier version of 1.8 billion euros involving?two electric heaters and partially powered by hydrogen.

Le Grix de la Salle stated that ArcelorMittal will continue to develop?electric-furnace projects in France and throughout Europe, in phases depending on the size of investments and market demand.

He said that the overall capacity of the Dunkirk plant will not change as the new furnace is a replacement. Staff levels should remain stable over the next few years.

(source: Reuters)