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British Steel Faces Nationalisation as £615 Million Rescue Tab Mounts Before Summer Deadline
A year after Parliament was recalled on a Saturday to pass emergency legislation keeping British Steel's blast furnaces lit, the UK government is running out of alternatives. The cost of keeping the Scunthorpe steelworks alive has reached approximately £419 million as of late March 2026, and is projected to hit £615 million by June [1][2]. Full nationalisation—transferring ownership from Chinese conglomerate Jingye Group to the British state—now appears to be a matter of when, not if.
The Financial Haemorrhage
British Steel's Scunthorpe plant costs the taxpayer approximately £1.3 million per day to operate [2]. That figure covers the raw materials—coking coal and iron ore—that Jingye refused to purchase in April 2025, triggering the government's emergency intervention [3].
The spending trajectory has been steep. By June 2025, the government had provided roughly £80 million in working capital. By September 2025, the figure had doubled to £200 million. By January 2026, it had reached £377 million [2]. If the current burn rate continues without a change in ownership or strategy, the total could exceed £1.5 billion by 2028 [2].
This expenditure comes on top of the broader commitments the government has made to the UK steel industry. The current administration has reserved £2.5 billion for steel transformation, supplementing the £500 million already committed by the previous government for Tata Steel's Port Talbot transition [4]. Tata and British Steel have each been offered approximately £300 million in direct aid [4]. The total public exposure to the steel sector now runs into the billions.
Who Owns British Steel and What Did They Pay?
Jingye Group, a privately held Chinese steel and chemical conglomerate based in Hebei province, completed its acquisition of British Steel in March 2020 [5]. The purchase price was reported at between £53 million and £70 million, depending on how acquisition costs and associated commitments were calculated [5][6]. The deal preserved approximately 3,200 jobs at Scunthorpe, Teesside, and Skinningrove [5].
As part of the acquisition, Jingye pledged to invest £1.2 billion over ten years to modernise the sites [5]. The company has stated that it invested over £1.2 billion to maintain operations [7], though it also reported daily losses of £700,000 and requested £1 billion in government support to transition from blast furnaces to electric arc furnaces (EAFs) [7][8]. The government offered £500 million; Jingye called it insufficient [7].
In recent weeks, the government reportedly offered Jingye a compensation package of under £100 million to relinquish ownership, which Jingye rejected [1][9]. The gap between what Jingye considers acceptable and what the government is willing to pay remains a central obstacle to a negotiated transfer.
The Jobs at Stake
British Steel directly employs around 4,000 workers across its operations, with approximately 2,700 at the Scunthorpe works and several hundred at Teesside and Skinningrove [8][10]. But direct employment understates the economic footprint.
The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) estimated that a British Steel collapse would put an additional 7,000 supply-chain jobs at risk [10]. The IPPR calculated the total economic damage at £2.8 billion in lost wages over a decade, £1.1 billion in lost government revenue and increased benefit payments, and £1.2 billion in reduced household spending [10].
Scunthorpe, a town of roughly 80,000 people in North Lincolnshire, is heavily dependent on the steelworks. Haulage companies, maintenance contractors, and local service providers rely on demand generated by the plant [10]. Teesside, while more economically diversified thanks to the nearby Teesside freeport and industrial zone, would also face significant job losses in an already deprived region.
The Legal Machinery
The government's current authority over British Steel rests on the Steel Industry (Special Measures) Act 2025, passed on 12 April 2025 after Parliament was recalled from Easter recess for a rare Saturday sitting [3][11]. The Act received Royal Assent the same day—an indication of the urgency involved.
The Act grants the Secretary of State for Business and Trade the power to direct the operations of steel manufacturers when it is in the public interest, including requiring specific assets to be used in particular ways or requiring certain management steps [11]. Critically, however, the Act does not transfer ownership. It gives the government operational control without nationalisation [11].
Full nationalisation would require either additional primary legislation or a negotiated purchase from Jingye. The precedent of the Iron and Steel Act 1949, which nationalised 94 steel companies, and the 1967 creation of the British Steel Corporation both required Acts of Parliament [12]. Given that the current government commands a substantial Commons majority, passing such legislation is procedurally straightforward, though the legal complexities of compulsory acquisition—particularly given the UK-China bilateral investment treaty—could introduce complications [13].
The Pension Question
The pension liabilities associated with British Steel are a separate but related concern. The original British Steel Pension Scheme (BSPS) was restructured in 2017, before the Jingye acquisition, when its then-sponsor Tata Steel UK sought to shed its pension obligations through a Regulated Apportionment Arrangement [14]. Members were offered the choice between a new, less generous scheme or the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) [14].
Approximately 7,700 members transferred out of the scheme, with the Financial Conduct Authority later finding that 46% had received unsuitable advice, leading to average individual losses of £82,600 [14]. Over £100 million in redress has been offered to affected members through the FCA's compensation scheme [14].
The current pension obligations attached to British Steel's workforce under Jingye's ownership are distinct from the legacy BSPS liabilities. However, under full nationalisation, the government would assume responsibility for ongoing pension commitments to current employees, adding to the long-term fiscal exposure. The exact quantum of these obligations has not been publicly disclosed.
The Structural Forces Behind the Crisis
British Steel's insolvency is not a single-cause event. Several structural forces converge to make traditional blast-furnace steelmaking in the UK increasingly unviable.
Chinese overcapacity is the most significant external pressure. China produces over half the world's steel—roughly 1 billion tonnes annually—and has been exporting aggressively as domestic construction demand has weakened [15]. Export prices have fallen to levels not seen since 2016, and anti-dumping measures have proliferated across the EU, US, Japan, and South Korea [15].
Energy costs in the UK are among the highest in Europe for industrial users. Although the government provides compensation for roughly 85% of low-carbon energy policy costs, bringing total policy costs to around £7 per megawatt-hour, the underlying wholesale energy price remains a competitive disadvantage compared to Germany, France, and especially the US [4][16].
Post-Brexit trade barriers have added friction. UK steel producers lost automatic access to the EU single market, and while tariff-rate quotas have been negotiated, the administrative burden and uncertainty have shifted some procurement to EU-based suppliers.
The green transition presents both a threat and an opportunity. The shift from blast furnaces to electric arc furnaces—which melt recycled scrap steel using electricity rather than smelting iron ore with coking coal—reduces CO₂ emissions by up to 75% [15]. British Steel announced plans in late 2023 to replace its blast furnaces with EAFs, projecting a reduction of 5 million tonnes of CO₂ annually, or 1.5% of UK total emissions [15]. But the transition requires massive capital investment and a reliable supply of affordable electricity, neither of which is currently assured.
Nationalisation would directly address the ownership impasse and the immediate funding crisis. It would not, by itself, resolve the energy cost differential, the competitive pressure from Chinese overcapacity, or the capital requirements for EAF conversion. These structural problems would follow the steelworks into public ownership.
How Other Governments Have Responded
The UK is not alone in wrestling with steel industry distress. Comparisons to France and Germany are instructive, though imperfect.
Germany has pursued a subsidy-heavy approach without nationalisation. The European Commission approved a €550 million direct grant and a conditional payment mechanism of up to €1.45 billion for ThyssenKrupp Steel Europe's green steel transition [17]. In total, ThyssenKrupp received EU approval for approximately €2 billion in state support [17]. In exchange, the company committed to building a direct-reduced iron plant and transitioning to hydrogen-based steelmaking. Even so, ThyssenKrupp announced plans to cut 11,000 jobs in November 2024 [17].
France took a more confrontational path. In November 2025, the French National Assembly passed a bill to nationalise ArcelorMittal France by 127 votes to 41 [18]. However, the executive government opposed the measure, and the conservative Senate was expected to block or heavily amend it [18]. ArcelorMittal itself argued that nationalisation "would in no way resolve the challenges faced by the steel industry in France and Europe" [18].
The key difference: Germany spent more but preserved private ownership with green conditions attached. France debated nationalisation but failed to execute it. The UK has already spent hundreds of millions without either a clear ownership resolution or a binding decarbonisation plan.
The Case Against Nationalisation
Critics of nationalisation raise several points that merit serious consideration.
Historical precedent is not encouraging. The British Steel Corporation, nationalised in 1967 and privatised in 1988, was "saddled with outdated equipment, inefficient practices, high energy costs and a lack of investment," according to analysis in CapX, with some facilities kept open despite operating losses to preserve employment in depressed areas [19]. The privatisation under Margaret Thatcher was widely regarded as having improved efficiency, though at significant social cost to steel communities.
The fiscal burden is open-ended. At current rates, operating costs alone could exceed £1.5 billion by 2028 [2]. Adding the capital investment required for EAF conversion—estimated at over £1 billion—the total taxpayer exposure could reach £3 billion or more, with no guarantee of commercial viability at the end.
Market discipline matters. As the Mises Institute and Conservative Home have argued, nationalisation removes the penalties for failure and the rewards for success [19][20]. Subsidies to a privately held company, while imperfect, at least preserve some profit motive to reduce costs and increase sales.
Alternative approaches exist. The government could allow British Steel to enter administration, provide redundancy and retraining packages for workers, and offer incentives for a new private buyer to acquire and modernise the sites—a path that several former Department for Business officials have advocated [19].
The Case for Nationalisation
Proponents counter with equally forceful arguments.
National security is not negotiable. The Strategic Defence Review has signalled substantial demand for domestically produced steel [21]. UK Steel, the industry trade body, has pushed for steel to be formally recognised as a strategic national asset, and the government has moved toward mandating the use of British steel in public contracts [21][22]. The Ministry of Defence purchased £37.4 million of steel from abroad in 2023—predominantly heavy plate—that could have been sourced domestically [22]. Losing domestic blast-furnace capacity would make the UK entirely dependent on imports for virgin steel, a vulnerability that defence planners consider unacceptable.
The community impact is concentrated and severe. Scunthorpe has few alternative employers of comparable scale. The IPPR's estimate of £2.8 billion in lost wages over a decade reflects a reality that market-based alternatives—retraining programmes, enterprise zones—have historically failed to offset in comparable deindustrialisation episodes [10].
Political consensus is unusually broad. Nationalisation has support from the Labour government, trade unions, and even Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, who endorsed "taking it into public ownership" [7]. The Community union, which represents the majority of British Steel workers, has argued that "these are the only remaining blast furnaces in the UK" and that their loss has "real importance for national security, defence and construction" [7].
UK Steel Production in Decline
The broader context is an industry in long-term contraction. UK crude steel production has fallen from 10.9 million tonnes in 2015 to an estimated 5.1 million tonnes in 2024 [23]. Manufacturing as a share of GDP has declined from 9.4% in 2010 to under 8% in 2024 [24]. The UK now produces less steel than Turkey, Iran, or Vietnam.
British Steel's two Scunthorpe blast furnaces are the last operational blast furnaces in the UK. Tata Steel shut down its blast furnaces at Port Talbot in late 2024 as part of its own EAF transition. If Scunthorpe's furnaces close, the UK will have zero primary steelmaking capacity—the ability to produce steel from iron ore rather than recycled scrap—for the first time since the Industrial Revolution.
What Happens Next
The government faces a decision with no clean options. Continue funding British Steel at £1.3 million per day indefinitely, nationalise and commit to a multi-billion-pound EAF transition with uncertain commercial returns, or allow closure and absorb the economic and strategic consequences.
Reports from late March 2026 indicate the government is moving toward full nationalisation [1]. The compensation negotiations with Jingye remain the primary obstacle, complicated by the UK-China bilateral investment treaty, which may require fair market value compensation for any compulsory acquisition [13].
Parliament could pass the necessary legislation quickly—the Special Measures Act demonstrated that emergency steel legislation can receive Royal Assent in a single day [11]. The political will appears to exist. The question is whether the government can secure terms that are defensible to taxpayers while acting before the summer deadline, when projected costs reach £615 million and the strategic case for intervention becomes harder to defer [1].
The clock is running. At £1.3 million per day, every week of indecision adds another £9 million to the bill.
Sources (24)
- [1]Government could soon fully nationalise Scunthorpe's British Steel worksgrimsbytelegraph.co.uk
Reports from late March 2026 indicate the Government is nearing full nationalisation of British Steel, with spending expected to reach £615m by June.
- [2]British Steel Is Bleeding £1.3 Million a Day of Public Money and Nobody Knows How to Stop Iteuropeanbusinessmagazine.com
Government has spent £377m with no exit plan; daily cost of £1.3m to keep Scunthorpe blast furnaces running.
- [3]Steel Industry (Special Measures) Act 2025en.wikipedia.org
Act passed in a single day on 12 April 2025 after Parliament recalled from Easter break, giving Secretary of State power to direct steel operations.
- [4]UK steel industry: statistics and policycommonslibrary.parliament.uk
Government reserved £2.5bn for steel transformation; Tata and British Steel each offered approximately £300m in aid.
- [5]British Steel sale to Jingye Group completesgov.uk
Jingye Group completed acquisition of British Steel in March 2020, pledging £1.2bn investment over 10 years.
- [6]China's Jingye acquires British Steel; to expand into EAF steelmaking on Teessidespglobal.com
Jingye acquired British Steel for a reported £53-70 million, preserving 3,200 jobs at Scunthorpe, Teesside and Skinningrove.
- [7]British Steel could be nationalised. Here's what that means for workers and the countrybigissue.com
2,700 jobs at risk at Scunthorpe; Jingye claimed £700,000 daily losses and requested £1bn in government support; broad political support for nationalisation.
- [8]2,700 jobs at risk at British Steel's Scunthorpe steelworksgrimsbytelegraph.co.uk
British Steel directly employs approximately 2,700 at Scunthorpe, with additional jobs at Teesside and Skinningrove operations.
- [9]Labour offer Chinese group multi-million pound compensation deal in British Steel disputegbnews.com
Government offered Jingye under £100m compensation; deal was rejected by the Chinese owner.
- [10]Allowing British Steel collapse would lead to £2.8 billion in lost wages, warns IPPRippr.org
IPPR estimates 7,000 additional supply-chain jobs at risk; £2.8bn in lost wages, £1.1bn in lost government revenue over a decade.
- [11]Debate on Steel Industry (Special Measures) Act 2025 - Hansardhansard.parliament.uk
Act grants Secretary of State power to direct steel operations in the public interest; does not transfer ownership.
- [12]Iron and Steel Act 1949en.wikipedia.org
Historical precedent: 1949 Act nationalised 94 iron and steel companies; British Steel Corporation created in 1967.
- [13]The British Steel Takeover and the UK-China Bilateral Investment Treatywolterskluwer.com
UK-China bilateral investment treaty may require fair market value compensation for compulsory acquisition of Jingye's assets.
- [14]British Steel Pension Scheme – our approach to enforcementfca.org.uk
7,700 BSPS members transferred out; FCA found 46% received unsuitable advice; over £100m in redress offered.
- [15]Global overcapacity slows down the sustainable steel transitionabnamro.com
Chinese steel overcapacity undermines confidence and slows investments in low-carbon steel production globally.
- [16]Factcheck: The steel crisis and UK electricity pricescarbonbrief.org
UK industrial electricity costs among highest in Europe; government compensates 85% of low-carbon energy policy costs.
- [17]ThyssenKrupp Steel to receive federal and state government funding totaling around two billion eurosthyssenkrupp-steel.com
Germany approved €2bn in state support for ThyssenKrupp green steel transition; 11,000 job cuts also announced.
- [18]ArcelorMittal criticizes France's nationalization moveeurometal.net
French National Assembly voted 127-41 to nationalise ArcelorMittal France; executive and Senate opposed.
- [19]Labour's steel strategy is rooted in nostalgia, not realitycapx.co
Historical nationalisation left British Steel Corporation saddled with outdated equipment and inefficient practices; privatisation improved efficiency.
- [20]Nationalising steel would be deeply misguidedconservativehome.com
Arguments against nationalisation: removes market discipline, open-ended fiscal commitment, alternative private solutions exist.
- [21]Strategic Defence Review signals huge demand for UK-made steeluksteel.org
Strategic Defence Review signals substantial demand for domestically produced steel; UK Steel pushes for steel as strategic national asset.
- [22]UK steelmakers and MOD have landmark opportunity to secure industryuksteel.org
MoD purchased £37.4m of steel from abroad in 2023; £10m of that could have been sourced domestically.
- [23]World Steel Association - Steel Statisticsworldsteel.org
UK crude steel production declined from 10.9 million tonnes in 2015 to an estimated 5.1 million tonnes in 2024.
- [24]Manufacturing, value added (% of GDP) - World Bankdata.worldbank.org
UK manufacturing as share of GDP declined from 9.4% in 2010 to under 8% in 2024.