Skip to main content

British Steel pushes its long bar and special profile steel products

British Steel is re-establishing itself in the construction equipment market as a supplier of long product steel and special profiles. British Steel as an entity disappeared with its acquisition first by Corus in 1999 and then Tata in 2007, re-emerging in 2016 as an independent company – having bought back its name for £1. The company supplies long bars to manufacturers such as Caterpillar to build undercarriages, as well as crane rails, and bucket and cutting-edge profiles to various customers. Forks and
April 26, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Grant McBain: British Steel is back in the market

8746 British Steel is re-establishing itself in the construction equipment market as a supplier of long product steel and special profiles.

British Steel as an entity disappeared with its acquisition first by Corus in 1999 and then Tata in 2007, re-emerging in 2016 as an independent company – having bought back its name for £1.

The company supplies long bars to manufacturers such as Caterpillar to build undercarriages, as well as crane rails, and bucket and cutting-edge profiles to various customers. Forks and masts for forklifts companies such as Toyota is also a growing sector for the company.

This is an area where surface quality is becoming a critical factor, says Grant McBain, commercial director, special profiles at British Steel, prompting the company to recently invest £2m in developing leading edge surface quality manufacturing capabilities. 

Although it has established customer bases already in the US and Europe, the company is capitalising on its previous and current reputation as a reliable global supplier of quality steel to promote itself further in Europe, as well as in Asia and other growth markets, says McBain.

British Steel produces 2.8 million tonnes of steel a year in its blast furnaces in the North of England.

The company has seen a 25% increase in sales over the last 18 months and is anticipating a further increase of 10% over the next 18 months.

The company has recently increased its production from 14 to 16.5 shifts a week to meet demand. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Euro Auctions event in Leeds brings yearly tally to €208 million
    December 9, 2016
    The latest equipment auction by UK-based Euro Auctions at its expanded Leeds site in England achieved a hammer price of more than €28 million (£24 million). During the three-day auction in Leeds in November, 3,750 lots went under the hammer, bringing the yearly total for the site to more than €208 million (£174 million). Euro Auctions said that the stand out lot was a 2011 Komatsu PC350LC-8 excavator loaded with features that had done only 794 hours. It achieved a hammer price of nearly €66,500 (£56,0
  • SMOPYC 2011 gears up for success
    March 1, 2012
    Plans are now well in hand for the upcoming SMOPYC construction equipment exhibition, which is being held in Zaragoza in Spain in May and several key improvements have been made for the show.
  • Fast-track Biloxi Bay bridge
    July 18, 2012
    Construction of a bridge destroyed in a hurricane was completed early, and with some added aesthetic benefits Hurricane Katrina, one of the deadliest and costliest natural disasters in US history, made landfall on 29 August, 2005, devastating the Gulf Coast. The US 90 Bridge over Biloxi Bay (connecting the communities of Biloxi and Ocean Springs, Mississippi) was one of many major highway and railroad bridges knocked out of service due to extensive storm damage. The eye of the storm passed 96km west of Bilo
  • JCB’s $100mn Brazilian factory opened
    September 28, 2012
    JCB’s new US$100 million factory in Brazil has been officially opened as the company strengthens its position in rapidly-expanding Latin American markets. At full capacity, the new plant will have the capability to produce 10,000 machines a year, and it replaces two smaller plants in Sorocaba, São Paulo State, the first of which JCB opened in 2001 to produce backhoe loaders and the second in 2010 to produce tracked excavators.