INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - In an April 7 story about ice on the Great Lakes interfering with steel production, The Associated Press reported erroneously that production at U.S. Steel’s Gary Works had stopped for a week. Production was scaled back but not shut down.
A corrected version of the story is below:
Crews work to clear Great Lakes shipping pathways
Crews keep up work to clear Great Lakes shipping pathways, after ore shortage hit steel mill
By JOHN FLESHER and CHARLES D. WILSON
Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - U.S. and Canadian Coast Guard crews kept up their battle Monday to clear pathways for vessels hauling vital raw materials on the ice-clogged Great Lakes, where a shipping logjam forced a weeklong slowdown at the nation’s largest steel factory.
Traffic remained largely at a crawl after a winter that produced some of the heaviest ice on record across the five inland seas, where more than half the surface area remained solid this week. Icebreaking ships slogging across Lake Superior were still encountering ice layers 2 feet to 3 feet thick. In some areas, wind and wave action created walls of ice up to 14 feet high.
United States Steel Corp.’s plant in Gary, Ind., was operating at reduced capacity as it tried to replenish its supply of iron ore. The mill received a shipment over the weekend of iron ore from a company mill near Detroit, which was sending one additional load, spokeswoman Courtney Boone said.
Two ships were scheduled to arrive Tuesday with ore from mines in northern Minnesota following a two-week voyage across Lake Superior, which ordinarily would take three days.
Other companies were hoping their supplies would be adequate to avoid significant disruptions.
“Nobody’s stockpile situation is very good,” said Glen Nekvasil, a spokesman for the Lake Carriers’ Association, which represents companies that operate 57 U.S.-flagged freighters on the Great Lakes. “It’s still very slow sledding.”
Only three ships were able to haul coal on the lakes in March, their cargos combining for 102,000 tons - down 70 percent from the same month in 2013, he said. Coal trade was 54 percent below the long-term first-quarter average.
The Gary Works mill generates steel for industries such as construction and auto manufacturing. Only one of the mill’s three furnaces was operating, Boone said Monday. The Gary Works is capable of producing 7.5 million tons of steel per year.
U.S. Steel was able to operate off stockpiles for some time before the ice began affecting production, Boone said.
Charles Bradford, a steel industry analyst, said the company should have done better planning even though this winter was among the harshest in recent memory. At one point, ice extended across 92 percent of the Great Lakes, falling just short of the record set in 1979.
“They know that every winter the Great Lakes freeze over,” Bradford said. Boone declined to comment.
The shipping season officially began two weeks ago with the opening of navigational locks on the St. Marys River connecting Lakes Superior and Huron, a bottleneck for vessels hauling iron ore and coal to manufacturers and electric power plants. But just one convoy of vessels - including two icebreakers and the two ships hauling iron ore - had traversed Superior with loads of freight.
Two other coal haulers were docked in Superior, Wis., waiting to make deliveries to a power plant in Marquette, Mich., said Mark Gill, director of vessel traffic service for the U.S. Coast Guard in Sault Ste. Marie. Five empty vessels were expected to begin crossing Lake Superior on Tuesday to pick up iron ore.
The We Energies Presque Isle power plant in Marquette was operating just three of its five generating units to conserve coal until more arrives, spokesman Barry McNulty said. Even so, there wasn’t enough demand to disrupt service, he said. The plant serves about 22,000 customers, mostly in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.
DTE Energy, which operates five coal-fired plants in southeastern Michigan, has dealt with dwindling stocks by taking some units out of production for maintenance ahead of schedule and making up for the loss by buying power from the grid, spokesman Scott Simons said.
“This will hold us over until we can rebuild our supplies,” Simons said.
General Motors has not had any delays or material shortages because of Great Lakes shipping problems, spokesman Tom Henderson said.
Nine U.S. Coast Guard ships are capable of breaking ice but only one, the Mackinaw, is equipped to deal with the thickest formations, Gill said. The Canadian Coast Guard dispatched two heavy-duty vessels to assist.
About three-quarters of Lake Superior, the largest and deepest of the Great Lakes, remained ice-covered. Gill estimated it would be about two weeks before the surface is clear enough for freighters to make the crossing without an icebreaker escort.
Even then, the icebreakers probably will be on duty well into May and possibly as late as Memorial Day.
“We’ll be constantly on search-and-destroy missions, finding big pieces of ice and breaking them into smaller pieces,” Gill said.
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Flesher reported from Traverse City, Mich.
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