A worker checks for cracks in a freshly minted steel slab at Stelco’s plant in Nanticoke, Ontario in mid-November.

A worker checks for cracks in a freshly minted steel slab at Stelco’s plant in Nanticoke, Ontario in mid-November.

Photographer: Cole Burston/Bloomberg

Can This 107-Year-Old Steelmaker Be Brought Back to Life?

A Brooklyn-born turnaround artist bets he can revive Canada’s Stelco in a market dominated by global behemoths and cheap Asian producers.

Winter is coming and Stelco Holdings Inc.’s steel plant on the Canadian shore of Lake Erie is stocking up for the stormy months ahead. Iron ore from Minnesota and Appalachian coal are streaming off ships on conveyor belts toward the blast furnace and coke ovens. Behind the docks, 25-ton coils of steel are lined up for shipment, still radiating heat three days after they were produced.

After decades of crisis, a renewed sense of purpose has settled over the 107-year-old company, which just completed the first initial public offering of a North American steelmaker in seven years. The question hanging over the reinvigorated enterprise is whether Stelco is finally on the cusp of sustained profitability, or whether it will wilt in an industry dominated by global giants and cheap Asian producers.