
Starmer just announced that the UK will nationalize British Steel. The move follows failed talks with Chinese owner Jingye. Last year, Scunthorpe’s blast furnaces, the UK’s last 2 producing virgin steel, faced shutdown. Jingye cited daily losses of hundreds of thousands of pounds amid global overcapacity, high energy costs and decarbonisation pressures. After Port Talbot’s closure in 2024, Scunthorpe stood as Britain’s sole primary steelmaker. Its potential end threatened the nation’s strategic steel independence. For a country that ignited the Industrial Revolution, the symbolism was profound. Britain pioneered coke-smelting and modern steelmaking, forging railways, ships and an empire. Scunthorpe, producing iron since the 1850s, embodied that heritage. Its closure would have marked the symbolic death of heavy industry in its birthplace, leaving the UK as the only G7 nation without domestic virgin steel.













