The government’s failure to support the ailing UK steel industry in last week’s budget has put thousands of jobs at risk, the prime minister has been told.
In a letter to Rishi Sunak, shared with the Guardian, trade union Unite said it was “disappointed” that the government had not announced plans to tackle the “serious threats facing the sector”.
The British steel industry has been shrinking for decades, amid competition from foreign imports, decarbonisation costs and soaring bills for the huge amount of energy required to make the alloy.
“It is your government’s official policy to grow foundation industries like steel, make them more internationally competitive and secure more jobs in them throughout the UK,” said the Unite general secretary, Sharon Graham. “But there is no sign that this is actually happening.
“Instead, the UK steel industry is shrinking, becoming less competitive and losing skilled jobs.
“This is a threat to thousands of workers and their families across Wales, the Midlands, the north-east and beyond. It is also a threat to the very heart of the communities that surround them. And it is a threat to the future of our national security and our broader manufacturing and construction industries.”
She welcomed plans to inject £600m into the industry to keep the UK’s last four steel blastfurnaces going and a transition from coal to lower-emission energy sources.
But even this sum fell far short of the “billions of pounds” that France and Germany are offering their own steelmakers, she said. She also called for tougher measures to ensure more domestically produced steel was used in UK infrastructure, as well as action to tackle “profiteering” from energy firms.
Shadow business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, said Labour would review key infrastructure projects, promising that a Labour government would “buy, make and sell” more steel in Britain to secure thousands of jobs.
“Labour understands the vital role steel plays in our economy,” he added.
Tata Steel, which operates two blastfurnaces, at Port Talbot, has repeatedly warned it may have to shut one or both of them unless more support is forthcoming.
Polling by the Indian-owned company, shared with the Guardian, shows strong public support for investing more in decarbonising UK steel and prioritising domestic output over foreign imports.
after newsletter promotion
“Keeping our domestic steel sector is overwhelming popular with the public who want to see the government invest in UK steel to support jobs and manufacturing,” said a spokesperson.
Kemi Badenoch, the business and trade secretary, said earlier this month that the government would support domestic steel production. However, the budget contained no concrete measures.
“We have already taken action to protect the industry from unfair trade and reduce the burden of energy costs, including £800m in relief for electricity costs to the steel industry,” said a Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy spokesperson.
“This is on top of a range of other competitive funds worth over £1bn to support efforts to cut emissions and become more energy efficient.”