When Turkey’s new Ankara–İzmir high-speed trains begin carrying passengers along 599km of track, the rail beneath them will have been made in north Lincolnshire, at British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant. That geographical journey — from the Lincolnshire countryside to Turkey’s Aegean coast — is more than just an interesting logistical fact. It is a statement about the enduring value of British manufacturing.
The eight-figure contract with ERG International Group, supported by UK Export Finance, covers 36,000 tonnes of rail for a line designed to cut travel times and carbon emissions between Ankara and İzmir. It is one of Turkey’s most ambitious infrastructure projects, and British Steel has been chosen as its rail supplier.
The human geography matters too. Twenty-three new workers have joined the Scunthorpe plant because of this contract. Overnight shifts have returned after more than a decade. Around 3,500 people work at the site, in a community where the steelworks is not just an employer but a defining institution. When the plant thrives, so does the community.
UK Steel has called the deal “essential to underpinning a sustainable turnaround” and urged the government to follow it with structural reforms. The industry body’s director general emphasised that British Steel is “a globally respected manufacturer” — and that global respect should be backed by domestic policy support.
The financial challenges — £1.2 million a day in losses, £359 million in total government costs — have not disappeared. But every set of rails that leaves Scunthorpe for Turkey is a reminder of what this plant can do, and why it matters that it continues to do it. That is a reminder worth having.
