Minister for Industry (): The Government committed to
updating Parliament on British Steel every four weeks for the
duration of the period of special measures being applied under
the Steel Industry (Special Measures) Act 2025 (“The Act”).
As the Chancellor set out at Spending Review on 11 June, this
Government faced a choice in April: to let British Steel
collapse, or to intervene. We were not prepared to tolerate a
situation in which Britain's steel capacity was critically
undermined, or to see another community with a deep industrial
heritage lose the pride, prosperity and dignity that industry
provides. We are proud of our decision to intervene to save
British Steel in Scunthorpe, and the jobs that come with it.
Since my last Written Ministerial Statement on British Steel on
20 May, I have written to several Members to respond to further
questions. Work continues to develop an impact assessment and
bring forward regulations under Section 7 of the Act, which allow
the Secretary of State to introduce a compensation scheme for
steel undertakings that have received a notice under the Act. We
are committed to facilitating ongoing scrutiny of the
Government's use of these powers and, to that end, the Secretary
of State has replied to correspondence from the Chair of the
Business and Trade Committee, and Baroness Jones will shortly
write to the Lords Constitution Committee in response to their
report entitled “Fast-track legislation and the Steel Industry
(Special Measures) Act 2025”, published on 8 May.
Our intervention in British Steel under the Act has enabled the
company to continue to operate two blast furnaces in Scunthorpe,
and we have secured sufficient supplies of raw materials to
maintain this asset configuration for the coming months. As Hon.
Members are aware, the redundancy consultation initiated by
British Steel's owners, Jingye, was cancelled shortly after the
Government's legislative intervention, removing the immediate
risk to 2,700 jobs, and I am pleased to confirm that British
Steel is now seeking to enrol its first apprentices in over 3
years. More than 200 people have applied to become British Steel
apprentices as the business seeks to develop its next generation
of engineers and technical experts, all based in Scunthorpe.
I am also delighted that British Steel, the UK's only
manufacturer of rail, has secured a new £500m long-term supply
contract with Network Rail. The 5-year agreement has an option to
extend for a further 3 years and ensures that British Steel
retains its position as principal supplier to Network Rail, the
organisation which operates and maintains Britain's rail
infrastructure. British Steel will deliver between 70,000 and
80,000 tonnes of rail a year, all manufactured at Scunthorpe.
Government officials continue to work onsite in Scunthorpe,
supporting British Steel's management team. Our priorities remain
continuing production, stabilising operations and remedying
critical health and safety issues. Since the Government took
control of operations, significant progress has been made to
improve safety standards.
We recognise the ongoing interest from Members across both Houses
regarding the funding that will be required for the Scunthorpe
site. The position remains that all funding will be drawn from
existing budgets, within the spending envelope set out by the
government at Spring Statement 2025. As the Prime Minister and
the Chancellor have made clear, the UK's fiscal rules are
non-negotiable.
To date, we have provided approximately £100m for working
capital. This covers items such as raw materials, salaries, and
addressing unpaid bills, including for SMEs in the supply chain.
This does not take into account future revenue. As previously
confirmed, the Department for Business & Trade's accounts for
2025/26 will reflect the financial support that the department
has given to British Steel.
As Spending Review 2025 has highlighted, this Government is
investing for the long-term future of UK steel, from £500mn for
Tata Steel in Port Talbot to new nuclear-grade capacity at
Sheffield Forgemasters — and we will invest in Scunthorpe's
long-term future . However, we have been clear that there also
needs to be private investment to modernise British Steel. Work
continues at pace to develop the optimal policy and strategy
approach, and we are working closely with Jingye to inform that
process.