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    1. Article contents:

      *Oliver Gill, Industry Editor | Harry Yorke, Deputy Political Editor | Tim Shipman, April 12 2025, The Sunday Times*

      Ministers could send the Royal Navy to escort a fuel shipment to Scunthorpe’s blast furnaces after parliament voted to seize control of British Steel to ensure its survival.

      A senior source said the government was considering the extraordinary move to ensure the cargo reached the UK without being intercepted or redirected.

      The location and details of the cargo have not been confirmed but it is said to be coking coal — vital to keeping the furnaces running.

      Without securing fresh supplies, the furnaces at the steelworks, owned by the Chinese firm Jingye, would burn out and be almost impossible to turn back on. This would kill the UK’s last domestic source of “virgin” steel, predominantly used to build rail tracks but also vital for Britain’s construction and automotive industries.

      The Ministry of Defence said no decision had been taken on the navy’s involvement and it is unclear whether ministers have made a formal request.

      MPs and peers were recalled to parliament to push through emergency legislation to seize control of British Steel. It was the first Saturday sitting since the Afghanistan crisis in 2021.

      The Steel Industry (Special Measures) Bill cleared both houses in several hours. The laws empower Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, to direct the board and the staff of British Steel, and to enter the company’s premises “using force if necessary”.

      It was brought forward as Labour seeks to shore up its support in its industrial heartlands in the face of pressure from Reform UK, which has backed full nationalisation. The Conservatives, who allowed the steelworks to be privatised under Margaret Thatcher and are broadly against state ownership, also backed the move.

      Negotiations to keep British Steel alive started under the last Conservative government but have intensified, with Reynolds locked in talks last week with Jingye on proposals for the government to pay for shipments of raw materials. It dawned on Reynolds on Thursday that the Chinese company was never going to accept the offer.

      He told parliament that Jingye had demanded “hundreds of millions of pounds” on top of the government’s deal, but without any conditions to stop the company transferring funds to China, or to ensure the blast furnaces were “maintained and in good working order”.

      He said it had also become clear that Jingye had no intention of purchasing sufficient raw materials to keep the furnaces running and intended to cancel orders.

      He added that the company would have “irrevocably and unilaterally closed down” Scunthorpe without government intervention.

      Writing for The Sunday Times, he said that without taking the powers “thousands of jobs would have been lost, as well as a crucial sovereign capability”. He added: “This government refused to be extorted by a company that repeatedly refused to act rationally.”

      Saturday brought chaotic scenes in Lincolnshire as steelworkers gathered to rally against a closure. Shortly after 8am a delegation of “six to eight” Jingye executives managed to gain access, despite their security passes being revoked.

      The Chinese officials then barricaded themselves in a room, sparking mayhem. “There was a lot of screaming and shouting,” said one company source. As workers called Humberside police to remove the Chinese delegation, the group “beat a hasty retreat” and left the site.

      Humberside police confirmed they had been asked to attend “following a suspected breach of the peace”. The force added: “Upon attending, conducting checks and speaking to individuals in the area, there were no concerns raised and no arrests were made.”

      Staff this weekend remain on high alert, however, as they await crucial deliveries of raw materials such as coking coal and iron ore.

      A shipment of coking coal was in port at Immingham, on the Humber Estuary, with no sign of it being unloaded. Sources claimed that Jingye attempted to sell the Immingham shipment to an unnamed Chinese company, starving the Scunthorpe works of crucial fuel. However, the government moved to stop this, with police said to have secured the shipment.

      In parliament, Reynolds presented the plan to take control of the site as an attempt to buy time rather than an immediate move to renationalise British steel. But in response to questions he noted that nationalisation may be “the likely option” in the long term.

      He faced calls from the Greens, the Liberal Democrats and Richard Tice, the deputy leader of Reform, to nationalise immediately. Tice, the MP for Boston & Skegness, urged Reynolds “to go further, to be bold, be courageous, show your cojones, show some mettle”.

      There was agreement that a Chinese firm should not have been allowed to buy the company. Liam Byrne, the Labour chair of the business and trade committee, said: “At the heart of this debate is actually a very simple question: can we entrust a critical national asset to a company that we do not trust? I say no, we cannot, we must not and we dare not.”

      Jingye did not respond to a request for comment.

    2. MisterrTickle on

      Largely thanks to Trump or at least the timing is. But it does seem that Jingye bought the site to shut it down and to make the UK dependant on Chinese steel.

      I’m no expert on the matter but apparently if the blast furnaces run out of fuel then it can irretrievably damage them. Causing them to never be started again. With the company seemingly determined to shut the plant down.

      What I don’t understand is where on Earth the coal is coming from for it to require the RN to escort the cargo ship. The Chinese Navy has a very minimal presence West of Suez. The only place it would matter was if the coal was coming from China and they could stop the shipment anyway, unless the ship had already left particularly if the ship was Chinese owned.

    3. This is getting wild:

      > The laws empower Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, to direct the board and the staff of British Steel, and to **enter the company’s premises “using force if necessary”**.

      Something positive:

      > The Conservatives, who allowed the steelworks to be privatised under Margaret Thatcher and are broadly against state ownership, **also backed the move**.

      I have feeling this is decision by the CPP, not the company:

      > **proposals for the government to pay for shipments of raw materials**. It dawned on Reynolds on Thursday that the Chinese **company was never going to accept the offer**.

      Or maybe just greed:

      > Jingye had demanded “hundreds of millions of pounds” on top of the government’s deal, but without any conditions to stop the company transferring funds to China, or to ensure the blast furnaces were “maintained and in good working order”
      > … had no intention of purchasing sufficient raw materials to keep the furnaces running and intended to cancel orders

      > Shortly after 8am a delegation of “six to eight” Jingye executives managed to gain access, despite their security passes being revoked.

      For some reason, this part doesn’t surpris me:

      > The Chinese officials then barricaded themselves in a room, sparking mayhem.

      Somewhat like out of a Hollywood film where the hero overcomes the villain:

      > A shipment of coking coal was in port at Immingham, on the Humber Estuary, with no sign of it being unloaded. Sources claimed that Jingye attempted to sell the Immingham shipment to an unnamed Chinese company, starving the Scunthorpe works of crucial fuel. However, the government moved to stop this, with police said to have secured the shipment.

    4. Howamimeanttodothat on

      Should never have closed the coal mines if we’re having to import that from abroad. But hey, the hate for the working man wanting to earn a decent living and green policies were and are more important policies.

    5. Now we have proven that companies and assets can be seized with a government bill, let’s turn our attention to Thames water and other national assets of great importance which are being run into the ground

    6. Funny.. I’ve been reliably informed by Reddit for the past few years that domestic coking coal production was totally unnecessary, backward looking, and would result in instant planet destruction..

      Or maybe it just gives all the power to the Indian and Chinese steel producers that the Tories sold us out to ..?

    7. This is wild indeed. We are sat on top of millions of tons of the stuff! The governments have covenants on land to mine the stuff.. but no, we do this instead?

    8. Everyone seems shocked by this but Europe has been out sourcing strategic resources to geopolitical adversaries for a long time. Look at Germany and Russia with Gas.

      Also look at multiple UK governments failure to manage and replace critical infrastructure, eg power plants and gas reserves.

      Always saving a quick buck but costing more in the future, false economy.

    9. limeflavoured on

      >The Ministry of Defence said no decision had been taken on the navy’s involvement and it is unclear whether ministers have made a formal request.

      So this is just someone making up a hypothetical scenario for clicks then?

    10. Time to open the mines back up and get some British coal to support British steel.

    11. Can I just point out that there is no way this nationalisation would have been possible if it weren’t for Brexit.

    12. Musk_bought_trump on

      and yet they allowed the blast furnaces at Port Talbot to shut down.
      The Welsh government were pathetic

    13. Adept_Deer_5976 on

      If Covid taught us anything, it is that the Chinese cannot be trusted and we cannot allow supply chains with vital national to have no redundancy

    14. If Margaret Thatcher wasn’t cremated, she’d be spinning in her grave… a cheap clean… somewhat dubiously unethical source of free power of you attached a generator to her.

    15. 623 illegal immigrants crossed the channel yesterday breaking UK law and undermining UK security. A year on year increase of 35%. Labour are actively facilitating it at this point.

      How about the Royal Navy deploys and escorts them – forcefully if necessary back to France. This is a national security matter…..so how come they can recall parliament over a steel plant but not something that puts the public at risk…especially women and girls??

    16. The fact that we need to consider using an escort fleet to ensure supplies shows a few things:

      1) economic warfare is a real thing, and in my view, the reason why this steel plant was ‘targeted’ for being shutdown by the Chinese company.

      2) we need a domestic source of coal and coke – open up that mine in Cumbria, and open up coke production. It doesn’t matter whether we extract it here or import it, we’re going to be using it either way. And we need this. If we use steel, those items are consumed anyway – so why on earth are we not benefiting from it.

      3) I’m all for going green where we can, but the reality is there are some industries where this can’t be done today. And this is a strategic necessity. Most things aren’t, some things are. Steel isn’t going away. We need to change our economic ideals away from the great experiment that’s been playing out over the last 40 years. We cannot open ourselves up to the manipulation of those that would do us great harm by having to be so reliant on them. Every other nation either directly or indirectly supports their heavy industry – we’re utterly foolish not to ourselves.

    17. Professional-List742 on

      Let the North Sea go for it too.
      Labour has nothing to lose so may as well do the right thing in many areas

    18. Alternative_Show9800 on

      There is a big lesson here….if everything is up for sale to the outside world how can we ever succeed. At the stroke of a pen Chinese owners close British Steel production but not their own. We need a Government led economic strategy, allowing the private sector to flourish, massive injections of capitol into wealth creation enterprises instead of socialism handouts to the unwashed. The social safety should be there but only minimally….benefits are out control…create well paid jobs…reestablish next generation manufacturing, using AI humanoid robotics instead of cheap labour…think out of the box leaders of this Country

    19. My_balls_touch_water on

      Thatcher fucked the country, just because of London’s hatred of the North West, Yorkshire and Northern Wales. Coal from China has and always will be, piss poor quality. Just privatise UK coal production, open UK mines again, sod China off and get back to making some of the best quality steel on the planet again. I don’t like the “us vs them” attitudes in politics, but holy shit the conservatives fucked us all hard.

    20. Fun that absolutely no one is now talking about CANZUK. Australia is one of the largest producers of ultra-low sulpher coal in the world. Why does not having a mine in Cumbria that won’t produce the right kind of coal anyway make us overly reliant on China?