MPs and Lords head to parliament as PM aims to pass emergency law today to save British Steel – live


Analysis: British Steel facing a crisis within a crisis

Jasper Jolly

Blast furnaces have been making steel in Britain for 300 years, ever since they helped start the Industrial Revolution. This weekend, parliament will sit for the first Saturday in decades as it tries to keep the last two furnaces running for a bit longer.

Keir Starmer has recalled MPs to discuss emergency powers to direct steel companies, including British Steel’s Scunthorpe steelworks, to “preserve capability and ensure public safety”. The move would be short of nationalisation, but it would give the government more influence on the steel industry than at any point since Margaret Thatcher.

The government is scrambling to save Scunthorpe after its Chinese owner, Jingye Steel Group, last month said it was considering closing it, with the likely loss of 2,700 jobs. Starmer and the business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, hope to keep the plant running for the next few weeks while they work out the longer-term plan, with nationalisation one option.

British Steel is facing a crisis within a crisis: in the short term – the next week or so – it needs materials, including iron pellets and coking coal, or else it faces the prospect of the furnaces cooling beyond easy or affordable recovery. Customers would flee, making job losses inevitable.

People with knowledge of this week’s talks between the UK government and Jingye said it appeared that the government had run out of patience with the Chinese company’s negotiating. The government had offered to buy the raw materials to keep the blast furnaces running in the short term but that offer was not taken up. Parliament may be able to avert the short-term crisis on Saturday.

Key events

It’s been a busy morning for Sarah Jones, who is now on BBC Breakfast.

Asked whether the government had received any private offers for the company’s Scunthorpe plant, Sarah Jones said:

There is not at the moment, to answer your question, a private company that is there willing to invest at this point.

Asked how the situation in Scunthorpe is different from the steel works in Port Talbot, Jones said there was a private company willing to invest in the latter.

When we came into government, there was a deal on the table with Tata Steel in Port Talbot.

We negotiated in 10 weeks a much better deal, but there was a private company willing to invest, who are now investing.

We have maintained 5,000 jobs on the site and there will be a future for that site with an electric arc furnace. There is no such deal on the table at the moment (for Scunthorpe), that’s what is different.

The other difference is that these are the last blast furnaces making primary steel that we have in this country, and also what is different of course is that the world is changing.

As we have seen with the prime minister’s support for our defence industry in recent times, we need to ensure as a country we have sovereign capability to make steel, and that is what we are securing today.



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