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Government expects to lose money running British Steel, says business secretary – UK politics live | British Steel

Government expects to lose money running British Steel – business secretary

Reynolds has also been speaking to Sky News’ Sunday Morning programme with Trevor Phillips. He has been asked how much it may cost the taxpayer if the government takes ownership and control of British Steel.

Reynolds said the government expects to lose money running British Steel, but allowing it to collapse would have cost £1bn. There still has been no confirmation of plans to nationalise the plant in Scunthorpe but public ownership is looking increasingly likely.

Speaking to Sky News, Reynolds said:

The losses, the annual losses, net losses, in the last set of accounts were £233m. Actually, that can be improved upon, but I am accepting your point that we would expect to lose money on this.

I would ask the public to compare that to the option of spending a lot more money to reach a deal that would have seen a lot of job losses and Jingye remain as a partner.

Or the cost of the complete collapse of British Steel, easily over £1bn in terms of the need to respond from government, to remediate the land, to look after the workforce.

The business secretary said that, as money had already been set aside for the steel industry at the budget, the government would not need to borrow more as a result of the takeover.

He added: “To be absolutely frank, I think supporting British Steel at this time, in that way, is better than spending a greater deal of money on the complete loss of the business or in a transition deal.”

Jingye still owns the site in Scunthorpe, but the steel industry bill published on Saturday gives the government the power to instruct steel companies in England to keep facilities open, with criminal penalties for executives if they fail to comply.

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Key events

The shadow business secretary, Andrew Griffith, was the chief business secretary to the then prime minister Boris Johnson during the months in 2019 when British Steel went into administration.

He has defended the move to sell British Steel to Jingye, claiming it was “the only deal at the time”.

Griffith told Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips on Sky News:

From my recollection, those conversations had been ongoing for some time. It was led by the secretary of state.

You have got to remember that Jingye was the only bidder at the time. It was a deal that was welcomed by the GMB union, by the community union, and by UK steel. ..

Many people, including the British Steel workers, the unions on the ground, local MPs, all wanted that deal to happen, and it did indeed go on and get investment into Scunthorpe and keep the business going so that there’s clearly been a breakdown.

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