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appalachiablue

(41,146 posts)
Tue Aug 15, 2023, 10:57 AM Aug 2023

Weirton, WV: Renewable Energy Plant Coming On Site of Once Thriving Steel Mill, Jobs Hope: Biden Act

A Renewable Energy Plant Will Rise In US Where A Steel Mill Once Stood, The Guardian, Aug. 14, 2023. Ed.

- Communities hope good new jobs will come from Biden’s historic climate investment in cities like Weirton, West Virginia

A cutting-edge energy storage company is building its main manufacturing plant where a once-thriving West Virginia steel mill once stood in the city of Weirton. According to lawmakers, the much-lauded project was made possible by incentives from 2022’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), signed by President Biden one year ago this Wednesday. For supporters, it’s a sign that climate policies can also breathe life back into deindustrialized coal and steel communities with green jobs.

The symbolism is compelling but how much those communities benefit will depend on a wide array of factors. Form Energy, a Massachusetts-based company helmed by a former Tesla vice-president, broke ground on its iron-air battery manufacturing plant this past May. Workers will produce batteries capable of storing electricity for 100 hrs, which will run on iron, water & air instead of the more common but less-abundant metal lithium. The $760m project will create 750 well-paying permanent jobs, the company said.

The plant is being constructed on the ashes of the old Weirton steel mill, once the beating heart of the steel economy in the Ohio River valley.

At its height in the 1940s, the mill was West Virginia’s number one taxpayer and its largest employer, boasting a 13,000-strong workforce. “You could literally graduate one day from high school and be hired at the steel mill making very good money,” said Mark Glyptis, president of the United Steelworkers Local 2911 and a 3rd-generation steelworker from Weirton. But Weirton’s economy began to wither in the 1970s. Local industry slowly declined as the market began to prefer cheaper foreign steel – and, Glyptis said, stopped enforcing regulations on the material.

The company filed for bankruptcy protection in 2003. The fallout, said Glyptis, has been “heartbreaking”. “It changed the landscape and the community has suffered significantly,” “Our children, many of whom were planning on staying and living in the valley, have had to leave the valley to seek employment somewhere else.” After the decline of domestic coal and steel, West Virginia transitioned from a production-based economy to a service-based one. This was a major blow to residents’ economic wellbeing..Challenges, the future. - Read more...https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/aug/14/weirton-west-virginia-battery-plant-steel-mill



- 2 mins. From Weirton Steel to Walmart: 1st 1000 Days, WV Public Broadcasting, 2015.
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Weirton, WV: Renewable Energy Plant Coming On Site of Once Thriving Steel Mill, Jobs Hope: Biden Act (Original Post) appalachiablue Aug 2023 OP
I've been to Weirton Hangdog Slim Aug 2023 #1
Good post, improving the economy and people's way of life will obviously appalachiablue Aug 2023 #2

Hangdog Slim

(81 posts)
1. I've been to Weirton
Tue Aug 15, 2023, 11:38 AM
Aug 2023

I've been to Weirton a number of times on my way to fill up an argon trailer at a nearby facility. I wondered, as I drove through town, seemingly through the mill itself, what that rusting hulk of a complex looked like when it was producing steel. I live quite near Bethlehem PA and wonder exactly the same thing as I marvel at the ruins of the old steel plant now turned into a walking tour for tourists as they arrive in town to play slots in our fancy casino. Is there a more apt metaphor for the U.S. economy?
I'm proud of our president today. He sees the need for progress toward clean, renewable energy and is acting on that need. The economy needs it - especially the local economy there which left the city decribit and collapsing and left the people who stayed with shanty ad hoc gambling houses and pill mills - and our environment requires it desperately.

appalachiablue

(41,146 posts)
2. Good post, improving the economy and people's way of life will obviously
Tue Aug 15, 2023, 12:11 PM
Aug 2023

be a long, slow lift. The damage from decades of deindustrialization, drug epidemics and despair in the Ohio Valley region and other areas is a serious challenge to overcome but I agree it's encouraging to see new green energy efforts like this new plant associated with Biden's initative.

The tourism and casino venues were maybe among few options sorry to say given the decline and lack of support and resources. But here's hoping for better, healthier days ahead. Thanks for your interest and reply.

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