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Tata Steel gets £500m to decarbonise Welsh site

Deal puts 3,000 out of more than 8,000 jobs at risk

Tata Steel gets £500m to decarbonise Welsh site

BRITAIN is to pump £500 million into Tata Steel to decarbonise its Welsh site, in a deal aimed at securing the future of the country's steel industry but which puts as many as 3,000 jobs at risk.

The £1.25 billion total funding package for Britain's biggest steel works includes £750m from Tata to pay for the switch to producing steel from lower-emission electric arc furnaces from coal-powered methods.

Britain's government said in a statement its grant, described as one of the largest government support packages in history, would help safeguard 5,000 jobs.

Tata Steel currently employs more than 8,000 people, raising the prospect that there will be as many as 3,000 redundancies as the lower-carbon electric furnaces are less labour intensive.

India-owned Tata Steel had long warned that without government help, it could close its sites and British business and trade minister Kemi Badenoch said on Friday (8) the government was securing jobs for the long-term.

"The UK government is backing our steel sector, and this proposal will secure a sustainable future for Welsh steel and is expected to save thousands of jobs in the long term," she said in a statement.

The government said Tata Steel UK would now inform and consult with staff and unions on the proposals.

Britain's steel industry directly employs 39,800 people, according to figures released by UK Steel in May, and supports a further 50,000 jobs in the supply chain.

A domestic steel-making industry is crucial to Britain's security because it is used to build warships and fighter jets, as well as underpinning the manufacturing, auto and transport sectors.

Britain said the new electric furnaces would cut the country's entire emissions by around 1.5 per cent.

(Reuters)

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England and Wales record one pub a day closed in 2025 as taxes and rising costs bite

Highlights

  • 366 pubs permanently closed across England and Wales during 2025, averaging one per day.
  • Total pub count falls to 38,623 from 38,989, with nearly 2,000 lost over past five years.
  • Industry warns business rates recalculation in April 2026 will worsen crisis.

One pub disappeared every day across England and Wales during 2025, as sustained cost pressures continued to devastate the hospitality sector, according to analysis of government statistics.

A total of 366 pubs were demolished or converted for other uses over the year to December, with the overall number falling to 38,623 from 38,989 a year earlier. The figures, analysed by tax specialists at Ryan, include vacant premises being offered to let.

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