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Opinion

Like the Abba song why did Welsh Government allow the 7,000 job Britishvolt project slip through its fingers

Leader of the Welsh Conservatives RT Davies said the project would have delivered a huge boost to the Welsh economy

(Image: Newcastle Chronicle)

ABBA may not be one of my all-time favourite bands, but they did have some cracking tunes back in the day.

As I was driving to the Senedd the other day, the Swedish group’s hit Slipping Through My Fingers came on the radio.

I must admit, I did have a little chuckle to myself as it played because – as far as I am concerned – never has a song so accurately summed up the Labour Government in Cardiff Bay.

Wales could’ve been home to the second largest industrial investment in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ history, but sadly the First Minister let the deal slip through his fingers.

I am, of course, talking about the failed project to create a battery cell gigafactory in the Vale of Glamorgan – which would have created some 7,000 jobs, boosted the Welsh economy and put Wales at the centre of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s green industrial revolution.

Britishvolt – the company behind the venture – had its sights set on St Athan to become home to its major gigafactory.

And it looked like things were going well, with the company and the Welsh Government entering into a memorandum of understanding – a promising step towards creating the factory.