
The United Kingdom approved an emergency law on Saturday, April 12 to stop the last British factory that can make steel turn off, allowing the government to take control of the British Chinese property steel plant. The site in northern England had faced an imminent closure, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer said urgent actions were needed to prevent their explosions from leaving and saving what remains from the United Kingdom’s steel industry. The Government saw its possible closure as a risk for the long -term economic security of Great Britain, given the definition of the steel industry once the United Kingdom.
British Steel has said that the tariffs of US president Donald Trump about the sector were partly guilty of the difficulties of the Scunthorpe plant. However, the fierce competition of the cheapest Asian steel has pressed the pressure of the besieged industry in Europe in recent years.
When the parliamentarians discussed in Parliament, Starmer made a launch to the region, where he told the steel workers gathered in a nearby City Council that the measure was “in national interest.” He said that the “quite unprecedented” movement meant that the government could ensure “a future for steel” in Britain. “The most important thing is that we have control of the site, we can make decisions about what happens, and that means that all these explosions will remain,” he said.
Protests against Chinese executives
In a rare weekend session, Parliament approved the legislation without opposition to take care of the operation of the Scunthorpe site, which employs several thousand people and produces the crucial steel for the United Kingdom industries, including construction and rail transport.
It occurred after the protests in the plant and reports that the workers had prevented the executives of the company’s Chinese owners, Jingye, to access the key areas of Steelworks on Saturday morning. The times The newspaper said that British Steel workers had seen a “delegation of Chinese executives”, who had been trying to enter critical parts of the works. Police said the officers arrived at the scene “after a suspended violation of peace”, but no trials were made.
Nationalization the ‘probable option’
Face questions about nationalization, the Secretary of Business and Commerce, Jonathan Reynolds, told the property of the property “remains on the table” and may well be the “probable option.” However, he said that the scope of Saturday’s legislation was more limited: “It does not transfer property to the government,” he explained, saying that it would have to be Dalt at a later stage. Reynolds said that “the effective market value of this company is zero”, and the ministers have said that no private company has been willing to invest in the plant.
The Labor Government was criticized by the Conservative Opposition Party for its management of the negotiations and faced calls from some leftist politicians to completely nationalize the plant.
Keep the underpants open
Chinese owners have said that it is no longer financially viable to execute the two ovens on the site, where up to 2,700 jobs have been at risk. Jingye bought British Steel in 2020 and says he has invested more than £ 1.2 billion ($ 1.5 billion) to maintain operations, but is losing around £ 700,000 per day.
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Reynolds said the government had tried to buy raw materials to keep the ovens in operation with “without loss at all for Jingye”, but with resistance. Reynolds added that Jingye had wanted to maintain the operation in the United Kingdom, but supply China’s slab steel to keep it in operation. Instead, Jingye demanded that the United Kingdom “transfer hundreds of millions of pounds to them, without any condition to stop that money and enhanced other assets that are immediately transferred to China,” he said. “They also denied a condition to keep the underpant underpants.”
Saturday’s legislation allowed criminal sanctions and gave government powers to take assets if executives did not comply with the instructions to maintain open explosions.
British Steel has its roots from the industrial revolution, but tok form in 1967, when the Labor Government nationalized the industry, which used almost 270000 people at that time.
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