Labour’s attempt to rescue steel industry branded ‘tragedy’ | Politics | News
Labour’s attempt to rescue the steel industry has been condemned as a โtragedyโ which is bad for both workers and taxpayers by one of Margaret Thatcherโs key advisers. Lord Redwood, who led the Iron Ladyโs policy unit, fears that if the UK abandons blast furnaces โevery time we need steel for a warship or for defence supplies we will need to find enough old saucepans and end of life cars to put the steel into the melting potโ.
Last year the Government passed emergency legislation โ in the first Saturday sitting of Parliament since the Falklands War โ to prevent the closure British Steelโs blast furnaces. The change in the law allows British Steel to be nationalised and, according to the public accounts committee, by last month the cost of supporting the company had hit ยฃ484million.
Lord Redwood said: โThe British Steel tragedy is costing UK taxpayers a fortune at a time when the Government needs to control its spending and get better value for money.โ
The National Audit Office reported in March that the cost of keeping open British Steelโs Scunthorpe site โ which is home to the UKโs last two blast furnaces โ is around ยฃ1.3million a day.
Lord Redwood said the Government is โfighting on two expensive fronts to cut the operating losses and to see off Chinese demands for compensationโ.
He added: โWorse still, the employees who were told their jobs are saved are in the dark about how long the Government will go on operating these furnaces and paying the bills.โ
The Tory peer blasted the Governmentโs approach as โbad for taxpayers, bad for the employees and bad for the ministers that took the bad decisions,โ adding: โWe all want to keep the jobs and keep UK virgin steel making capability. This is not the way to do it.โ
Turning his guns on the Governmentโs net zero policy for forcing up the price of energy, he said: โOur steel industry, like ceramics, petrochemicals, glass, fibreglass and much else, is being sacrificed on the altar of decarbonisation and dear energy. The losses at Scunthorpe are greatly magnified by our energy being so much dearer than Chinese or US energy โ countries that have no restraint on burning coal, oil and gas when needed. The UK’s mad net zero dogma says we should not burn it ourselves but should import all the things that need someone to burn fossil fuel instead. This of course increases world [carbon dioxide levels] by the all the extra diesel and aviation fuel burned to get the things to us.โ
More steel imports will be hit with tariffs from next month but Lord Redwood does not believe the policy will help UK steelmakers.
He warned: โAdding high tariffs to imported steel as the Government is now doing to try to protect the nationalised business will drive more UK steel users out of work and their employees out of jobs. The Government needs to change its stance quickly while there is still some steel industry left to save.โ
A spokesperson for the Department for Business and Trade said: โSecuring the long-term future of the UK steel sector is in our national interest. While this will require both public and private investment, weโve taken the first step towards securing steelmaking by introducing legislation which will grant us powers to take ownership of British Steel. We fully recognise the challenges the sector is facing on the cost of energy, which is why our modern Industrial Strategy is cutting electricity costs for industries across Great Britain, including steel.โ
