The Labour Court has directed ArcelorMittal South Africa to restore employment for staff dismissed from its Newcastle and Vereeniging facilities earlier this month, marking a significant setback for the steel producer’s cost-cutting measures. The decision, handed down on 27 October 2025, stipulates that the company must compensate affected employees for lost wages and recommence dialogue with the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa within ten days to explore viable options beyond redundancies. According to ECR News, this intervention stems from the court’s determination that initial consultations, initiated under Section 189 of the Labour Relations Act earlier in the year, were inadequately conducted, particularly as circumstances evolved around potential state support.
ArcelorMittal South Africa, the continent’s largest steel manufacturer, has been grappling with mounting operational pressures, including the phased closure of its long products division, which prompted the initial retrenchment announcements affecting around 4,000 positions across the two sites. The Newcastle plant in KwaZulu-Natal and the Vereeniging works in Gauteng, key hubs for producing construction-grade steel, have become focal points of contention amid broader industry woes such as volatile global prices and import competition. As reported by eNCA, the dismissals on 12 October proceeded despite ongoing union objections, exacerbating tensions in a sector that employs over 100,000 people nationwide and underpins vital infrastructure projects.
The union, representing the majority of workers at these plants, swiftly sought urgent judicial relief on 8 October, arguing that the employer had prematurely abandoned meaningful engagement in March, even as prospects for a government bailout and acquisition by the Industrial Development Corporation materialised. The ruling effectively invalidates terminations linked to the original January notice, mandating fresh proceedings to identify alternatives like reskilling or phased reductions. The Citizen details how this procedural lapse contravenes protections under Sections 189 and 189A of the Labour Relations Act, which safeguard employees during large-scale restructurings by enforcing collaborative problem-solving.
NUMSA has hailed the outcome as a crucial win for labour rights, opening avenues for substantive discussions that could avert further losses in communities dependent on steel jobs. The union’s leadership has indicated readiness to pursue additional remedies, such as initiating business rescue mechanisms or pressing for full state takeover of the company, should negotiations falter. According to Business Day, this stance reflects escalating frustration with protracted talks between ArcelorMittal and the IDC, where no firm purchase agreement has yet emerged, leaving the fate of mothballed assets like the Saldanha Bay facility in limbo.
ArcelorMittal has responded by lodging an application for leave to appeal, which temporarily halts enforcement of the order and allows operations to continue under the status quo. The company maintains that its actions were necessary to address chronic unprofitability, with long steel units incurring losses exceeding R1 billion annually due to outdated infrastructure and market saturation. Jacaranda FM News reports that while the appeal process unfolds, the firm is open to renewed consultations, though it cautions that underlying financial realities may limit concessions without external intervention.
This dispute unfolds against a backdrop of South Africa’s steel industry’s decline, where domestic production has fallen by 20 per cent over the past decade amid cheap Asian imports and energy shortages. The Department of Trade, Industry and Competition has prioritised sector revitalisation through the Steel Master Plan, aiming to safeguard 300,000 indirect jobs via subsidies and trade barriers. As outlined in Engineering News, precedents like the 2022 interdict against NUMSA strikes at ArcelorMittal underscore the courts’ role in balancing corporate survival with worker protections, often compelling mediation to preserve industrial capacity.
For the affected employees—many from historically disadvantaged backgrounds—the reinstatement offers immediate relief, including back pay that could total millions in aggregate. Yet NUMSA emphasises that true resolution demands bolder state action, including absorbing the entire operation to fuel local manufacturing and avert regional economic hollowing. GroundUp notes similar past conflicts, where judicial interventions have occasionally led to wage settlements but rarely addressed root causes like underinvestment.
In the end, the Labour Court’s directive not only pauses a wave of redundancies but also reignites debates on industrial policy in a nation striving for equitable growth. With appeals pending and nationalisation rhetoric intensifying, the coming weeks could redefine ArcelorMittal’s trajectory, potentially steering it towards sustainability—or deeper entanglement in public hands.

