It takes a foreign infrastructure project to turn on the night shift at Scunthorpe — and that is exactly what has happened. British Steel’s contract to supply rail for Turkey’s new 599km Ankara–İzmir high-speed railway has led directly to the resumption of 24-hour production at the north Lincolnshire plant, something that had not been seen there for over a decade.
The eight-figure deal with ERG International Group has also created 23 new jobs and brought in tens of millions of pounds in revenue, backed by UK Export Finance. Turkey’s Ankara–İzmir railway — a flagship project designed to cut travel times and carbon emissions — has chosen British-made rail, and that decision has had a ripple effect that is being felt on the factory floor in Scunthorpe.
UK Steel has praised the deal and used it as an opportunity to make the broader case for British Steel’s future. The industry body’s director general called rail “a strategically vital, high-value product” and urged the government to complement export success with structural reforms on energy and imports. He described British Steel as “a globally respected manufacturer” — and said it deserves to be treated as one by policy makers.
The night shift’s return is symbolic as well as practical. It suggests a level of operational intensity that has been missing from Scunthorpe for years, and it signals to workers, investors, and potential future owners that the plant can operate at scale. That is an important message to send.
The daily losses of £1.2 million and the £359 million total government bill cast a shadow over all of this. But the night shift is back, the Turkish deal is real, and British Steel is turning heads — both in Ankara and in north Lincolnshire. That is a story worth telling.
