Members of four trade unions -- Unite, Community, GMB and Ucatt -- had started an overtime ban and work-to-rule slowdown yesterday ahead of 24-hour strike on June 22 to protest changes to their pension scheme.
But they confirmed it has been suspended as negotiators secured a new offer which could see the scheme remain open.
Roy Rickhuss, general secretary of Community, said: "It is good that Tata Steel has finally seen sense, participated in the meaningful discussions that we have been calling for and changed its mind about closing the scheme.
Trade unions representing workers of Tata Steel in the UK had announced strike action on June 22 -- the biggest industrial action in the UK in nearly three decades -- over proposed changes in the company's pension scheme.
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"Consultation will begin with a meeting of senior union delegates from across the company on Friday," Rickhuss said.
The four unions together represent over 17,000 steel workers who had been told that they may have to retire at 65 rather than 60 under new pension proposals.
The row has been brewing for months raising the prospect of the first major strike action in Britain's steel industry in over 30 years.