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In this Dec. 26, 2013 photo provided by the U.S. Coast Guard the icebreaker Mackinaw maintains a shipping lane on the St. Marys River linking Lakes Superior and Huron. It’s been so bitterly cold for so long in the Upper Midwest that the Great Lakes are almost completely covered with ice. The last time they came this close was in 1994, when 94 percent of the lakes’ surface was frozen. (AP Photo/U.S. Coast Guard
In this Dec. 26, 2013 photo provided by the U.S. Coast Guard the icebreaker Mackinaw maintains a shipping lane on the St. Marys River linking Lakes Superior and Huron. It’s been so bitterly cold for so long in the Upper Midwest that the Great Lakes are almost completely covered with ice. The last time they came this close was in 1994, when 94 percent of the lakes’ surface was frozen. (AP Photo/U.S. Coast Guard
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GARY, Ind.—U.S. Steel has temporarily halted steelmaking at its massive northwestern Indiana mill because the ice-covered Great Lakes have cut off the mill’s access to vital iron ore.

The company says in a letter to its customers that it has idled the Gary Works complex’s blast furnaces and steelmaking due to “unprecedented ice conditions on the Great Lakes.”

The Times of Munster reports ( ) that treacherous ice covering much of Lake Superior has prevented ships from hauling iron ore from Minnesota’s Iron Range to northwestern Indiana steel mills.

The Gary Works complex is the nation’s largest steel mill, stretching seven miles along Lake Michigan. It can produce 7.5 million net tons of steel a year.

More than 5,800 employees who work at the mill continue to report to work.

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