Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Rare sitting in parliament to 'protect' British Steel

Reports said that parliament could then be asked to nationalise the company at a later session.

Rare sitting in parliament to 'protect' British Steel

Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer holds a press conference on nationalising British Steel, at Downing Street on April 11, 2025 in London, Britain. Carl Court/Pool via REUTERS

THE government has recalled parliament this weekend aiming to pass emergency legislation to "take control" of a struggling British Steel plant, prime minister Keir Starmer said.

MPs will join a rare Saturday (12) sitting to discuss the draft bill which would allow the Labour administration to take measures to prevent the plant's imminent closure with thousands of jobs at stake.


The government has been scrambling to prevent the closure of Britain's last remaining blast furnaces at Scunthorpe after British Steel's Chinese owner Jingye announced plans to scale back operations last month.

"The future of British Steel hangs in the balance," said Starmer.

Starmer said parliament "will pass emergency legislation in one day to give the business secretary the powers to do everything possible to stop the closure of these blast furnaces".

The BBC reported that parliament could then be asked to nationalise the company at a later session.

Starmer has said that all options are open to secure the future of the plant but has not specifically mentioned nationalisation.

"It enables the UK government to preserve capability and ensure public safety," a Downing Street spokesperson said.

MPs left for their Easter holidays on Tuesday (8) and were not due to return to parliament until April 22.

FILE PHOTO: A general view shows British Steel's Scunthorpe plant, in Scunthorpe, northern England, Britain, March 31, 2025. REUTERS/Dominic Lipinski

The lower house of parliament was last recalled from recess in August 2021 for a debate about the situation in Afghanistan as the western-backed government fell to the Taliban.

In an indication of how seriously the government is taking the plight of British Steel, the last Saturday sitting of parliament was in October 2019 to vote on prime minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal.

Before that MPs last sat on a Saturday recall at the start of the Falklands War between Britain and Argentina in 1982.

"We have been negotiating with British Steel's owners in good faith ever since coming to office," the Downing Street spokesperson added. "We have always been clear there is a bright future for steel in the UK. All options remain on the table."

Starmer's move was welcomed by the unions.

"I am pleased that the government has listened to representations by Unite and other steel unions," said Sharon Graham, secretary general of Unite, one of UK's largest trade unions. "It is absolutely the right thing to do to begin the process of nationalisation."

British Steel said US president Donald Trump's tariffs on the sector were partly to blame for the plant's difficulties.

However, it is fierce competition from cheaper Asian steel that has been blamed for heaping pressure on Europe's beleaguered steel industry in recent years.

Any decision to close it could cost up to 2,700 jobs at its main Scunthorpe site.

The Financial Times on Wednesday (9) reported that chancellor Rachel Reeves "is open to the option of bringing British steel into public ownership", citing people close to recent conversations held between the minister and union bosses.

British Steel, which employs about 3,500 people in total, has so far failed to reach agreement with the government on a financial package that would help it transition to "greener" steel making.

Starmer recently announced that the government was stumping up some £2.5 billion ($3.2bn) to help support the steel sector in Britain, home also to operations owned by Indian group Tata.

Saturday's sitting will begin at 10.00am GMT.

"Recalling parliament is the right decision to ensure that British Steel, the wider steel sector and thousands of steel workers and their families are given the certainty they deserve in trying times," said UK Steel director-general Gareth Stace.

Greenpeace's Lily-Rose Ellis said MPs "must vote in favour of nationalisation and seize the opportunity to revitalise the industry, making Britain a world leader in green steel manufacturing".

British Steel was privatised in the 1980s by Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government and later taken over by India's Tata Steel in 2007.

In 2020, it was rescued from the brink of insolvency by Jingye but continued to face financial difficulties.

Scunthorpe in northern England is British Steel's primary site, and Britain's last virgin steel plant -- which produces steel from raw rather than recycled materials -- after Tata's Port Talbot shuttered its blast furnace last year.

(AFP)

More For You

Harry and Meghan urge tougher safeguards to protect children online

Prince Harry criticised tech companies for citing privacy laws to deny access

Getty

Harry and Meghan urge tougher safeguards to protect children online

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have called for stronger protections for children online, warning that not enough is being done to shield young people from the dangers of social media

During a visit to New York, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle unveiled a new memorial dedicated to the memory of children whose families believe harmful online content contributed to their deaths. The installation, named the Lost Screen Memorial, features 50 smartphones, each displaying an image of a child lost to what their families describe as the adverse effects of social media. The memorial was made available to the public for 24 hours.

Keep ReadingShow less
Afghan exodus soars as Pakistan deadline nears

Afghan refugees arrive at a camp near the Torkham border last Sunday (20)

Afghan exodus soars as Pakistan deadline nears

MORE than 100,000 Afghans have left Pakistan in the past three weeks, the interior ministry said on Tuesday (22), after Islamabad announced the cancellation of residence permits.

Calling Afghans “terrorists and criminals”, the Pakistan government launched its mass eviction campaign on April 1. Analysts said the expulsions are designed to pressure Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities, which Islamabad blames for fuelling a rise in border attacks.

Keep ReadingShow less
Government announces funding for offshore wind supply chains

Energy secretary Ed Miliband reads a letter from Britain's King Charles III during the Future of Energy Security Summit at Lancaster House on April 24, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Justin Tallis - WPA Pool/Getty Images)

Government announces funding for offshore wind supply chains

THE government has announced an initial £300 million investment to strengthen domestic offshore wind supply chains ahead of the Comprehensive Spending Review. The funding will be distributed through Great British Energy, the country's publicly-owned clean energy company.

Prime minister Keir Starmer on Thursday (24) said the investment aims to support jobs and help the UK reach clean power by 2030.

Keep ReadingShow less
modi-pahalgam-getty

'I say to the whole world: India will identify, track and punish every terrorist and their backer,' Modi said in his first speech since the incident.

Getty Images

Modi vows to hunt Kashmir attackers ‘to the ends of the Earth’

INDIA and Pakistan have exchanged a series of diplomatic measures after prime minister Narendra Modi blamed Pakistan for a deadly shooting in Pahalgam, Kashmir, in which 26 civilians were killed.

Modi said India would identify and punish those behind the attack and accused Pakistan of supporting cross-border terrorism.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump

Trump also announced an initiative on historically black colleges and universities and signed orders on AI education and workforce development.

Getty Images

Trump signs orders targeting university diversity policies and accreditation

DONALD TRUMP signed a set of executive orders on Wednesday aimed at US universities, focusing on foreign donations, college accreditation, and diversity and inclusion initiatives.

One order directs the federal government to enforce existing laws requiring universities to disclose large foreign gifts. Another addresses accreditation, which Trump has described as a “secret weapon.”

Keep ReadingShow less