The much-anticipated rebirth of the former Magnetation iron-ore tailings operation in Grand Rapids, Minn., is on hold as the new owners wrestle with higher costs and bigger upgrades than expected.
The unexpected costs are associated with a related plant in Indiana where the Grand Rapids ore tailings would be converted into iron pellets.
Robb Bigelow, ERP Iron Ore's managing director, said in an interview Wednesday that air pollution controls and permitting in Indiana will require an investment of $10 million to $20 million. Until Indiana can be upgraded, there's no need for ore to be shipped from the Grand Rapids plant.
"We didn't know there was a nonfunctioning air pollution system there," he said, adding that the complication "probably pushes [the Grand Rapids plant restart] out 12 months."
The investors behind ERP have told public officials they will shift their attention to completing the deal to buy and reopen the bankrupt, half-built Essar Steel Minnesota taconite plant in Nashwauk. Both the former Magnetation property in Grand Rapids and Essar are controlled by companies whose main investor is Virginia billionaire Tom Clarke.
Iron Rangers and union leaders say they're disappointed by the turn of events. Many were counting on the former Magnetation plant being brought back online soon, restoring jobs on the western edge of Minnesota's Iron Range.
"We have people who were laid off from Magnetation who could use the work," said Mike Syversrud, president of the Iron Range Building and Construction Trades, who met recently with Bigelow to express his frustrations.
Magnetation filed for bankruptcy in May 2015. The Indiana pelletizing plant plus three of its Minnesota ore concentrator plants and one rail loading center were bought out of bankruptcy in February by Clarke and his team at ERP.