Hibbing Taconite has neighbor troubles.
Hemmed in by cities to the south and east — and by the competing Keewatin Taconite to the west — HibTac's open pit mine will run out of accessible, quality iron ore by 2024.
There are options to expand the Hibbing mine, but they are complicated and potentially involve making a deal with the lease holders of other ore reserves or scrambling development plans for a long-stalled iron mine in Nashwauk. Other possibilities include finding new technology to sniff out tiny, untouched slivers in the current mine.
The solution, if one is found, is likely to be a combination of ideas.
"I am definitely concerned," said Chisholm Mayor John Champa. "It would be a huge economic impact to the city [of Chisholm] if we were to lose HibTac. A big percentage of their workers are from Chisholm, which is basically touching HibTac. It's one of our bigger employers for Chisholm."
HibTac, which began pelletizing iron ore in 1976, injects $449 million into the Iron Range economy. That includes the $107 million in annual wages paid to its 735 workers.
Hibbing Taconite is jointly owned by three companies: Luxembourg-based ArcelorMittal (62.3%); Ohio-based Cleveland-Cliffs (23%); and Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel (14.7%).
All three companies declined interviews for this story, but ArcelorMittal Americas issued a statement.