WALES' health minister has met one of the bosses of Tata Steel to talk about the future of the steel industry in Wales.
Eluned Morgan met Tata Steel’s global chief executive TV Narendran in India on Thursday, ahead of the St David’s Day celebrations in Mumbai to launch the year of Wales in India.
The purpose of the meeting was to continue conversations had between the first minister, economy minister Vaughan Gething and Tata Steel following their announcement to close Port Talbot's two blast furnaces and coke ovens in a phased manner.
The health minister also stressed the importance of full consideration of alternative options that the trade unions have presented and urged the company not to make any irreversible choices.
Ms Morgan said: “Steel is the thread that will run through the economy of today and tomorrow and Welsh steel can play a major role in that transition.
"The Senedd recently passed a unanimous vote in support of maintaining blast furnace steelmaking in Port Talbot as part of a fairer, longer transition.
"This is the message I raised with Tata Steel here in India while urging the company to avoid irreversible actions that close off opportunities for a better, credible deal. "
Economy minister Vaughan Gething said: “We urge Tata Steel and UK Government ministers to establish fresh talks to prevent the economic loss our steel communities face.
“We hope that through dialogue with the unions, parties can find a credible way forward for the business that does not require the planned loss of both blast furnaces and job losses on this eyewatering scale.”
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