
British Steel has issued the layoff notice of 2,700 employees, giving the steelworkers great relief. With the UK government intervening and returning the company into public ownership, this decision ends weeks of anxiety for the workers and their families.
The steelworks in Scunthorpe, under the ownership of Jingye Group from China, had recently turned down a government support package containing £500 million intended to be paid to keep the blast furnaces operational. Instead, the company chose to make plans for massive job cuts and put the workers into a sense of panic.
Latest Update
Under a new leadership structure, British Steel officially terminated the job-cut consultation with the Department for Business and Trade. Lisa Coulson, the new Chief Commercial Officer, has confirmed:
“We are officially closing the redundancy consultation without any job losses. The difficult time for our employees is now behind us.”
Furnaces were restarted soon after necessary raw materials were secured. The Royal Navy was even placed on standby to ensure the shipments of coking coal would be unloaded on time.
Why This Matters
Trade union Unite welcomed the decision. The spokesperson said:
“British Steel finally did the right thing. Job cuts are not the way to keep Britain strong in industry.”
Shortly thereafter, with the company now surviving, British Steel is expected to play an extremely important role in the future of UK industry.