Steel Lifeline: Scunthorpe secures temporary reprieve

Steel Lifeline: Scunthorpe secures temporary reprieve

British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant avoids immediate shutdown as ministers intervene — but long-term security remains uncertain.


The UK government has stepped in to avert the imminent closure of British Steel’s Scunthorpe blast furnaces, following a critical breakdown in operations after Chinese owner Jingye halted purchases of key raw materials.

Emergency legislation passed over the weekend will temporarily secure operations at the Lincolnshire site, which employs over 4,000 workers and supports a regional supply chain vital to UK infrastructure and defence. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds told Parliament the government could not allow the “strategic failure of British steelmaking.”

Jingye, which acquired the plant from liquidation in 2020, has cited commercial and geopolitical pressures in reducing its support. The decision prompted cross-party concern over the UK’s industrial resilience and dependence on foreign ownership in critical sectors.

The move follows broader concerns about the health of the UK’s steel industry. Domestic producers have long struggled under high energy prices, competition from subsidised overseas imports, and ageing plant infrastructure. British Steel’s future now hinges on finding a sustainable buyer or investor willing to modernise the plant and commit to long-term UK production.

Analysts warn the intervention may mark the beginning of a wider industrial strategy rethink — one in which government support is increasingly tied to national security and supply chain continuity.



  • The cybersecurity paradox of digital trust

    The cybersecurity paradox of digital trust

    Digital growth depends on trust built on fragile foundations. Dan Bridges, Technical Director – International at Dropzone AI, argues that growth demands digital trust, but architectures were built for a more trusting era — leaving security operations struggling to keep pace with AI-driven threats and an always-on risk landscape.


  • Strong knowledge foundations drive AI advantage

    Strong knowledge foundations drive AI advantage

    Mature knowledge systems determine AI and growth outcomes. A global iManage study finds organisations with strong knowledge foundations are nearly twice as likely to report revenue growth and are significantly more successful at embedding AI into daily operations.


  • Google backs Open Partners ad tech build

    Google backs Open Partners ad tech build

    Google partners with Open Partners on proprietary ad tech. The collaboration will see the independent agency’s Automated Campaign Execution platform — ACE — formally developed within the Google ecosystem ahead of a planned early 2026 launch, following reported uplifts of 20–30% in ROAS and conversions.