
Germany’s largest steel manufacturer, Thyssenkrupp Steel, is once again planning to temporarily suspend production of electrical steel at one of its plants due to high volumes of cheap steel imports from Asia.
Production at the plant in Isbergues, France, is to be halted from June to September, the Duisburg-based company announced on Thursday.
Around 600 employees are affected. They are to receive support from the French government during the period.
The plant in Germany's Gelsenkirchen has a similar number of workers. At the end of 2025, both sites were shut down for half a month.
Since January, Isbergues has been operating at just 50% of its total capacity.
The head of the subsidiary Thyssenkrupp Electrical Steel, Angelo Di Martino, spoke of a "ruinous flood of imports."
The temporary shutdown of the French site was "necessary to to stabilize our company amid further deterioration in order intake," di Martino added.
No comparable measures were planned in Gelsenkirchen, said a spokesman for the steel division.
Import prices were in some cases far below production costs in the European Union.
"We therefore urgently need effective trade protection to establish fair competitive conditions for this strategically important product," he explained.
The company is engaged in constructive dialogue with the European Commission and hopes for the prompt introduction of effective trade protection measures.
Thyssenkrupp Electrical Steel manufactures speciality steels for the energy sector. The material, known as grain-oriented electrical steel, is generally used for power transmission, but is also employed in transformers at substations and in wind turbines.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Mechanical Sidekick d: A Survey of \Elements and Execution d\ Cell phone - 2
Make your choice for the bird that catches your heart! - 3
Second doctor in Matthew Perry overdose case sentenced to home confinement - 4
Artemis moon mission breaks record for distance from Earth - 5
Doomed SpaceX Starlink satellite photographed from orbit
Spanish bishops and government sign deal for compensation of church sexual abuse victims
Southern Californians, your health insurance costs could rise in 2026
Moscow accuses Berlin of stifling the opposition
Chief of Staff Zamir warns IDF will collapse due to lack of manpower, raises 'ten red flags'
Mali and Canadian miner Barrick agree to resolve tax dispute, ending 2-year standoff
How a toxic self-improvement trend with a funny name took over your feed
Vote In favor of Your Favored Kind Of Bites
The Best Competitors of the 21st Hundred years
NASA Artemis 2 astronauts to make historic moon flyby today. Here's what to expect hour by hour (timeline)












