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Manufacturing

Liberty Steel plants up for sale have 'viable' future, Business Secretary says

Kwasi Kwarteng has insisted the Government was right to turn down a £170m request from the owner of Liberty Steel

A steel sheet is bent in to a 'U' shape before being turned into a pipe at Liberty Steel's mill in Hartlepool(Image: Bloomberg)

Liberty Steel plants put up for sale as part of a rescue package for the embattled firm are “fundamentally good assets” with a viable future, the Business Secretary has said.

Kwasi Kwarteng said the plants in Yorkshire and the West Midlands - which support around 1,500 jobs - would not have been put up for sale if they were not of interest to buyers.

Liberty has been in a battle to arrange new financing since the collapse of Greensill Capital earlier this year. On Monday it said it had agreed a re-financing package that involved the sale of a number of its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sites.

Asked about the possibility of nationalising the steel industry, Mr Kwarteng said he had not ruled this out, but thought it was unlikely.

He said: “My own view and that of my officials is that the assets are good. That’s why the financiers are putting them up for sale, they wouldn’t be doing that if they didn’t think there would be buyers in the market.

“The assets fundamentally are good, the workforce is skilled and dedicated, the managers of the plants are very experienced and I’ve spoken to them very frequently.

“The issue that Liberty had was to do with financial engineering, the opaque bit, if you like, of GFG, the leverage, the finance, the debt they had incurred. All of that was what put a lot of pressure on those businesses.”