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Hyundai Steel and LSU Seal Research Pact Tied to USD 5.8 Billion Louisiana Steel Mill, POSCO Taking 20% Stake

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Hyundai Steel and LSU Seal Research Pact Tied to USD 5.8 Billion Louisiana Steel Mill, POSCO Taking 20% Stake

Hyundai Steel and Louisiana State University signed a Master Research Agreement on June 17, creating a formal R&D framework tied to the Korean steelmaker's planned USD 5.8 billion electric arc furnace mill in Ascension Parish, Louisiana — one of the largest industrial investments in the state's history.

The pact mobilizes LSU's College of Engineering, College of Science, and specialized research facilities — including the Louisiana Light Source synchrotron and a USD 10 million scanning transmission electron microscope — on metallurgy, materials science, energy, robotics, automation, and environmental engineering relevant to the mill's operating requirements.

"By combining Hyundai Steel's industrial expertise with LSU's academic excellence, we can create strong synergies that lead to technological advancements," said Hyundai Steel SVP Yoo-dong Chung. LSU President Wade Rousse called the investment "a win for our state and an opportunity for LSU to rise to meet the moment."

The Louisiana facility, sited on 1,800 acres in the RiverPlex MegaPark in Donaldsonville, is on track for commercial launch in 2029. It will produce 2.7 million metric tons of automotive-grade steel annually, initially supplying Hyundai and Kia plants in the United States before expanding to other North American automakers.

POSCO, Korea's largest integrated steelmaker, holds a 20% equity stake in the project following a USD 582 million investment commitment expected to close by end-2027. The two companies signed an initial MOU in April 2024 to cooperate on low-carbon steel and battery materials; the Louisiana stake marks POSCO's execution of that arrangement and its first North American beachhead without building from scratch.

Louisiana Economic Development provided approximately USD 600 million in state incentives. The project is expected to create around 1,300 direct jobs averaging USD 95,000 in annual salary, plus an estimated 4,100 indirect positions — roughly 5,400 new jobs in the Capital Region.

Why It Matters

The EAF choice resolves a Scope 3 problem. The plant is fully EAF-based, smelting recycled scrap rather than refining pig iron. That process produces roughly 70% fewer carbon emissions than a traditional blast furnace and eliminates the coking coal supply chain. For Hyundai Motor Group — which must meet increasingly stringent Scope 3 standards tied to vehicles sold in Europe and California — an in-house EAF source within 50 kilometers of the River Parishes resolves a supplier-disclosure exposure that imported blast-furnace steel cannot.

Tariff arithmetic. Korea-made automotive steel entering the United States faces a 25% Section 232 tariff. Louisiana-produced steel does not. With Hyundai's Georgia assembly plant — Meta Plant America in Bryan County — operational and further US capacity under consideration, sourcing domestically produced Korean-grade steel becomes a structural margin improvement, not merely a political gesture.

POSCO's parallel move. POSCO separately opened Korea's largest EAF at its Pohang complex this week, underscoring a group-wide pivot from blast furnaces. Its USD 582 million Louisiana stake gives the Pohang-based steelmaker a North American commercial footprint, while Hyundai Steel gains a creditworthy co-investor and a potential future customer for non-automotive grades.

LSU as a long-game asset. River Parishes Community College will supply trained technicians via Louisiana Economic Development's FastStart workforce program. The LSU research agreement, however, targets a longer horizon: sustained R&D capability in advanced materials characterization may over time allow the mill to move into higher-margin specialty steel grades where pricing far exceeds standard automotive sheet.


Sources: Korea Times, LSU News, Manufacturing Dive, Louisiana Economic Development, Bossier Press-Tribune

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