ALL GIFTS MATCHED for a limited time.
Support our nonprofit newsroom with a donation.
Pittsburgh's Public Source
U.S. Steel plans to invest up to $2.5 billion into upgrades to its Mon Valley Works, which it forecasts will generate $1.7 billion for the state, according to a Monday report from the steelmaking giant.
The economic impact is expected to include the combined dollars spent on things such as wages and construction costs associated with the upgrades, according to the report.
The investment will preserve the roughly 3,000 jobs at Mon Valley Works and create nearly 3,200 indirect and induced jobs over a three-year period, according to the report. The company projects the upgrade work will generate up to $58 million in state and local tax revenues over the next three years. It comes as a part of the company’s larger commitment to invest $11 billion into its domestic footprint by 2028, on the heels of a $15 billion acquisition by Japan-based Nippon Steel last year.
The investment includes a new hot strip mill at the Edgar Thomson plant in Braddock. The new mill will replace an 87-year-old hot strip mill at the nearby Irvin plant in West Mifflin, and will allow U.S. Steel to produce products for the automotive industry and other high-strength steels that the Mon Valley Works “cannot competitively produce,” according to materials the company has shared with community leaders.
“The Mon Valley Works is where the American steel industry was first forged, and this investment is proof that its best days are still ahead,” the company’s President and Chief Executive Officer David Burritt said in a statement.
After debuting the $11 billion plan in November, U.S Steel hasn’t fully laid out how it intends to divvy up the investment across its domestic footprint. It originally pledged to invest $1 billion into the Mon Valley Works.
The upgrades will implement new technology that the company says will reduce its emissions and produce a “cleaner, more efficient production process.” The push toward a less emissions-intensive steelmaking process comes as Allegheny County is working on its climate action plan that urges U.S. Steel to phase out its current processes in favor of carbon capture and direct reduced iron technology.
Philadelphia-based consulting firm Parker Strategy Group created Monday’s economic impact report.
U.S. Steel’s Mon Valley Works is made up of three sites: the Edgar Thomson plant in Braddock, the Clairton Coke Works and the Irvin plant in West Mifflin.

None of the $2.5 billion is indicated as slated for the Irvin works or the Clairton plant, which was rocked by a fatal explosion last year. Two workers died and 10 more were injured in the blast.
U.S. Steel was fined $118,000 in the aftermath of the explosion. The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration cited the plant for inadequate safety procedures, training and equipment.
Increasingly, U.S. Steel and other manufacturers are looking South to produce more steel for the automotive industry. The company’s holdings in Arkansas and Alabama are non-unionized and sit close to the Southern automotive corridor — a network of manufacturing hubs stretching from South Carolina to Mississippi.
The company plans to invest $3 billion into its Big River Steel site in Arkansas. Of that, $1.9 billion will go toward a direct reduced iron plant — a steelmaking process that produces high-quality iron by removing oxygen from iron ore pellets using reduced gasses, such as hydrogen or natural gas, rather than melting it in a blast furnace. That iron is a key ingredient in steel.
An Lewis, executive director of the Steel Rivers Council of Governments — a resource-sharing nonprofit membership organization for Mon Valley communities — said at a June Steel Rivers board meeting that the communities “need to be thinking about what it is we can do in our communities to help U.S. Steel want to stay here.”
“If they don’t build here, what are we going to be left with?” Lewis said.
Nippon Steel has pledged to become carbon neutral by 2050. Direct reduced iron facilities, like the planned Arkansas plant, are typically less carbon intensive than other iron-making methods. Big River also utilizes electric-arc furnaces, which melt recycled scrap steel, producing fewer emissions than the traditional blast furnaces such as those at Edgar Thomson.
The company met with officials in the Mon Valley last week to discuss the investment, according to Lewis.
Together, the Mon Valley Works produce around one-quarter of Allegheny County’s greenhouse gasses, according to the county’s in-progress climate action plan.
The developing plan is expected to be finalized by the end of August. It also urges the company to invest in a new strip mill at the Irvin plant and invest in carbon capture technology for any remaining emissions.
Last week U.S. Steel continued its yearslong legal appeal of more than $4 million in fines issued by the Allegheny County Health Department for alleged hydrogen sulfide air quality violations between 2020 and 2023. The company agreed to a $1.5 million class action settlement in 2025, which compensated residents within one mile of Edgar Thomson over odors and other emissions from the facility. U.S. Steel denied allegations made against it as a part of the settlement.
Lucas Dufalla is the Southern Communities reporter at Pittsburgh’s Public Source and can be reached at lucas@publicsource.org.
Oliver Morrison contributed to this report.
Can you help us keep going with a gift?
We’re Pittsburgh’s Public Source. Since 2011, we’ve taken pride in serving our community by delivering accurate, timely, and impactful journalism — without paywalls. We believe that everyone deserves access to information about local decisions and events that affect them.
But it takes a lot of resources to produce this reporting, from compensating our staff, to the technology that brings it to you, to fact-checking every line, and much more. Reader support is crucial to our ability to keep doing this work.
If you learned something new from this story, consider supporting us with a donation today. Your donation helps ensure that everyone in Allegheny County can stay informed about issues that impact their lives. Thank you for your support!
![]()
Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
You may republish this Pittsburgh’s Public Source story in full online or in print under the conditions stated below. You may also choose to republish the first 12 paragraphs with imagery and link to PublicSource for the full story. All you need to do is copy the HTML code we provide on this page and paste it into your CMS. We strongly encourage you to copy the code and paste it directly into a code editor. In WordPress, press the three dots in the upper right of the Post and choose Code editor. That should give you the story text, along with photos from the body of the article. Here are your obligations under our republishing guidelines:
- Give us credit, in this format: “by [Author Name(s)], Pittsburgh’s Public Source”.
- Include a line at the top of the story that reads: “Pittsburgh’s Public Source is an independent nonprofit newsroom serving the Pittsburgh region. Sign up for our free newsletters.”
- In the html code of the page, include a line of javascript that helps us keep track of hits. It’s already in the code below.
Let us know when you use our work by sending an email to natasha@publicsource.org. By republishing our story, you agree to the following conditions:
- You can’t edit, cut or alter the story, except to suit your in-house style (e.g. % vs. “percent,” honorifics, etc).
- You must not resell the story or sell ads against the story. It’s fine to publish the story on a page that’s surrounded by previously sold ads, however.
- Please exclude our work from being published or syndicated to third-party platforms or apps like Newsbreak under your publication name, when possible
If you share the story or a link to the story on social media, please tag us on Twitter (@publicsourcepa), Instagram (@publicsource), Facebook (@publicsource) or TikTok (@publicsource). We reserve the right to deny, revoke or limit the rights conveyed herein for any reason, including (but not limited to) instances in which these conditions are not met or the reproduced material is not presented in a responsible manner.
by Lucas Dufalla, Pittsburgh's Public Source
June 8, 2026
Lucas Dufalla is an editorial intern and senior history major at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. He writes for the school’s student-run newspaper, The Bowdoin Orient. Last summer, he worked for… More by Lucas Dufalla
Donate
Get Public Source’s newsletter today:
Sign in by entering the code we sent to , or clicking the magic link in the email.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.





Leave a Reply