Key Takeaways:
- Visakhapatnam Steel Plant revival secured through a Rs 11,440 crore centre-funded package on 16 January 2025.
- RINL restored full-scale operations with three blast furnaces and record daily liquid steel output of 20,934 tonnes on 24 December 2025.
- Equity infusion and loan conversion aim to stabilise finances and protect thousands of jobs.
After years of uncertainty and intense local protest, 2025 proved to be the year of recovery for Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limited (RINL), the corporate entity that runs the Visakhapatnam Steel Plant. A centre-approved revival package and a surge in production have restored confidence in the public sector steel major.
Visakhapatnam Steel Plant revival drives production surge
The Union government approved a comprehensive Rs 11,440 crore rescue package on 16 January 2025, consisting of a Rs 10,300 crore equity infusion and the conversion of Rs 1,140 crore of working capital loans into preference shares. The measure was designed to stabilise RINL’s balance sheet, enable full-scale operation of its three blast furnaces and secure jobs for thousands of employees.
The announcement ended nearly three years of political turbulence that followed the Centre’s 100 per cent strategic disinvestment proposal in January 2021. That proposal had triggered widespread protests across Andhra Pradesh, with state legislators and local activists staging demonstrations, a high-profile resignation and a prolonged hunger strike.
Operationally, the revival package delivered results quickly. On 24 December 2025, the plant’s Steel Melting Shops reported a combined daily liquid steel output of 20,934 tonnes, surpassing the previous record set in January 2021. Steel Melting Shop-2 (SMS-2) alone produced 11,169 tonnes in a single day, marking a new peak for the unit and underlining the plant’s return to near full-strength operations.
Industry analysts say the immediate benefits are twofold: improved liquidity and renewed production discipline. The equity infusion provides the capital to run all furnaces without crippling working capital constraints, while the loan conversion reduces short-term repayment pressure. Together, these steps have allowed RINL to restore continuous operations and target higher utilisation rates.
Local leaders and union representatives have welcomed the government’s intervention. Management at RINL indicated that the focus will now shift to sustaining the production gains and enhancing product mix to meet market demand. The plant supplies flat steel and long products to domestic infrastructure and manufacturing sectors, and higher output is expected to ease supply-side tightness in key segments.
While the political debate that accompanied the disinvestment proposal shaped the plant’s recent history, the 2025 package has refocused attention on industrial stability and employment preservation. Officials involved in the rescue programme emphasised that safeguarding thousands of direct and indirect jobs was a central objective of the intervention.
Looking ahead, RINL plans incremental upgrades and maintenance schedules to sustain the higher sortie of furnaces and shops. The company will also monitor steel demand trends to calibrate production and pricing strategies. For a facility that had faced an uncertain future, the combination of central support and record output represents a tangible restoration of state-backed industrial capability.
As RINL consolidates these gains, stakeholders will watch whether the plant can translate one-off production peaks into durable performance improvements that benefit the regional economy and the national steel sector.

















