UK Government Takes Control Of British Steel To Safeguard Jobs And Secure Industry’s Future.
The UK government has officially taken control of Chinese-owned British Steel, following the swift passage of emergency legislation through parliament to prevent the closure of the country’s last remaining blast furnace site in Scunthorpe.
At an extraordinary Saturday sitting of parliament, the legislation was passed without opposition, allowing the state to intervene in the operation of the northern England plant. The factory, which employs thousands of workers, is vital to Britain’s infrastructure, supplying steel for construction and rail networks.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced the government’s decisive action, stating, “We stepped in to save British Steel.” He emphasised that this unprecedented move was in the national interest and essential to halting the decline of the UK’s steel industry. “We’re turning the page on a decade of decline and acting to protect the jobs of thousands of workers,” he added.
Following the vote, Starmer travelled to the region and met with steelworkers at a local village hall, assuring them that the government now has control of the site and will make decisions that keep the blast furnaces operational.
Tensions had escalated earlier in the day when British Steel workers reportedly blocked Chinese executives from accessing critical areas of the site. Police were called to address a suspected breach of the peace, but no arrests were made.
The plant, which has faced mounting financial struggles, was previously owned by Chinese firm Jingye, which bought it in 2020. The company claims to have invested over £1.2 billion in the site but is currently losing an estimated £700,000 per day. Jingye had proposed continuing operations by importing slab steel from China, a plan the UK government rejected in favour of maintaining full domestic production capabilities.
Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said the emergency legislation gives the government powers to ensure the blast furnaces remain active and introduces criminal sanctions for non-compliance. While ownership has not yet been transferred, Reynolds confirmed that nationalisation remains “a likely option.”
The move comes amid broader challenges facing the European steel industry, including stiff competition from cheaper Asian imports and the recent imposition of US tariffs by President Donald Trump, which British Steel partly blamed for its difficulties.
Scunthorpe is now the UK’s last virgin steel plant, producing steel from raw materials, following the closure of blast furnaces at Tata’s Port Talbot site last year.
British Steel traces its roots back to the Industrial Revolution and was first nationalised in 1967. Today’s intervention marks a significant moment in its storied history and reflects the government’s renewed commitment to preserving critical national industries.
As Starmer noted, “The most important thing is we’ve got control of the site. That means the blast furnaces will stay on — and with that, a future for steel in Britain.”