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Manufacturing

Business Secretary says Scunthorpe steelworks may need "different employment footprint"

Jonathan Reynolds was speaking as coking coal arrived into the country to keep the site's blast furnaces running

The British Steel Scunthorpe site(Image: Getty Images)

Job roles at Scunthorpe steelworks may have to change to secure the plant's long term viability, the Business Secretary has said.

The Government is looking for a private sector partner for the British Steel site, days after parliament passed emergency powers to keep the plant's two blast furnaces running. Jonathan Reynolds has not ruled Chinese firms being involved in the site's future.

British Steel's Chinese owner Jingye announced the closure of the remaining blast furnaces at Scunthorpe last month - a move which threaten to end virgin steel making capabilities in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and put 2,700 people out of work. The Government passed emergency powers in Parliament on Saturday to keep the furnaces running after there were fears the blast furnaces at Scunthorpe could be left to cool if Jingye did not order the materials needed to keep them running.

Left to cool, the furnaces could be in danger of becoming blocked beyond repair.

Mr Reynolds spoke at the Port of Immingham where coking coal arrived, destined for the plant. He said: What we need for the long-term future of British Steel is that private sector partner to work with us as a Government on a transformation programme.

“That might be new technology, new facilities, that might have a different employment footprint. The staff here absolutely know that, they know they need a long-term future. These blast furnaces have given this country nearly a century of service in one case, so they know they need the future and that might be a different model, different technology.

“What they didn’t want was the unplanned, uncontrolled shutdown of the blast furnaces with thousands of job losses and no plan in place for the future. And by what we’ve been able to do, working with the brilliant team here at British Steel, is secure the possibility of that better future – and I for one am confident that we’ve made the right decision to support the people here.”

Unions including the GMB, Community and TSSA have welcomed the Government’s action to keep Scunthorpe open.