
Unions mull over Liberty Steel as two electric arc furnaces in Rotherham stand 'idle' for nearly a year
Liberty's subsidiary Specialty Steel UK faces a winding-up petition, and trade unionists want Gupta to step aside. Community Union leader Roy Rickhuss met Gupta yesterday.
Specialty Steel UK (SSUK) employs 1,450 people in the North, Midlands and Scotland. Chris Williamson, union secretary at Rotherham, said: 'We feel like we're being wound down.'
Liberty said it had covered wages, maintaining the sites and sustaining the business, costing £200million, adding: 'We're working on all viable solutions to ensure a long-term future for Specialty Steel.'
Liberty's owner is being pursued by creditors, led by administrators for Greensill Capital, which collapsed in 2021 having lent Gupta's firms £3.6billion.
If wound up on July 16, the Official Receiver would take control of SSUK and seek a buyer.
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Times
an hour ago
- Times
SNP transition fund spends £43m on just 110 jobs for oil workers
A fund designed to protect North Sea oil and gas workers from the SNP's net zero drive created just 110 new jobs despite spending £43 million, a new report has found. An analysis of the first two years of the Scottish government's Just Transition Fund, which is set to cost taxpayers half a billion pounds over a decade, found that it had 'safeguarded' only another 120 further existing roles. The policy, announced by Nicola Sturgeon in 2021, was intended to ensure that new green jobs are created for workers whose livelihoods depend on fossil fuel industries. A report commissioned by the Scottish government found the scheme, which backed 24 projects such as a 'sustainable' whisky distillery, an eco-tourism firm and new tidal energy research projects, could be 'a successful catalyst for economic and environmental change'. However, critics claimed that it had delivered only a 'paltry return' after the SNP repeatedly vowed that it would ensure that North Sea workers do not end up on the scrapheap as part of its plans to wind down the oil and gas industry and replace it with clean energy industries. The North Sea oil and gas industry is estimated to directly employ around 30,000 people and supports a further 100,000 indirectly. The Scottish government has said it wants to hit net zero by 2045 — five years ahead of the rest of the UK — and is sticking to the target despite repeatedly failing to hit, and then scrapping, interim targets. The analysis, carried out by the research firm Blake Stevenson Ltd, found that 47 jobs had been created through the Social Enterprise Just Transition Fund, which include positions in 'green skills training'. A handful of others were created through a nature restoration project based around the River Findhorn and an 'adventure tourism' firm. However, the report warned that many of the roles were 'temporary, project-based, or contingent on further investment' and 'may not transition into lasting opportunities'. Douglas Lumsden, the Scottish Tory net zero spokesman, said: 'This paltry return will do nothing to allay the fears of tens of thousands of highly skilled workers in Scotland's oil and gas sector. 'They know the SNP and Labour are taking a wrecking ball to their industry and this report confirms they have not got a clue how to properly protect jobs for the future. 'Taxpayers will be rightly thinking their money has typically been squandered by the SNP who must urgently shift from their current reckless approach if we are to achieve an affordable transition.' The fund was created as a counter to claims that the SNP's net zero policies, which were enthusiastically championed under Sturgeon, would cost thousands of jobs and cause devastation to the north east economy. The SNP has repeatedly claimed that it will ensure the push to net zero does not mean that communities suffer in the same way as others did under deindustrialisation under Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s. When the just transition fund was announced, ministers said they would target investment to help create 'good, green jobs' to replace those that would be lost in the North East and Moray. According to the report, the fund has also helped to leverage £30 million in private sector investment and £4.7 million from the public sector or charities. It claimed that initiatives funded by the scheme were also responsible for the training of 750 people. The report said that while the fund 'has been a successful catalyst for economic and environmental change' in the area, 'several administrative and logistical challenges have emerged'. These include uncertainty over long-term funding, confusion over the application process and a lack of clarity over funding criteria. The report said: 'Many projects remain in early stages, making it difficult to fully assess employment outcomes, carbon savings, and long-term economic benefits.' Gillian Martin, the climate action secretary, said: 'This independent report demonstrates our Just Transition Fund is a catalyst for economic growth. With £75 million allocated to the fund since 2022, the expert report makes clear it has supported job creation and re-skilling, empowered communities, catalysed private investment and initiated innovation in green technologies. 'Thanks to the Just Transition Fund, more than 230 jobs have been created and safeguarded, 750 training places opened up and over £34 million in additional investment secured in its first two years. These are the initial impacts of the fund and we are confident that job numbers, investment leveraged and other key outputs will increase as projects continue. 'This is just one example of how this government is supporting Scotland's valued and highly skilled oil and gas workers, who are at the very heart of the just transition to net zero — despite the fact that decisions on offshore oil and gas licensing, consenting and the associated fiscal regime, are all matters that are currently reserved to the UK government.'


The Independent
6 hours ago
- The Independent
Business confidence at highest level in eight months, RBS finds
Business confidence has risen to its highest level in eight months, according to a Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) survey. The private sector also saw its strongest rise in activity since November, the bank's growth tracker found. Overall, the combined output of Scotland's manufacturing and service sectors rose from a score of 50.5 in May to 50.9 in June. It marks the second consecutive monthly rise in business activity. RBS said that while the uptick was modest overall, it was the strongest since November 2024. The growth was driven entirely by the services sector with new project funding and a rise in demand underscoring the uptick. Manufacturing continued to fall sharply, the tracker found. Overall, business confidence improved to its highest level of optimism in eight months. Judith Cruickshank, chair of the One Bank Scotland Board, said: 'Scotland's private sector recorded a sustained uptick in activity at the end of the second quarter, with growth predominantly driven by service providers. 'In contrast, the manufacturing sector faced a challenging demand environment, leading to overall declines in new business and production. 'Despite these sectoral differences, firms exhibited increased optimism about the future, with manufacturers reporting positive growth forecasts for the first time in three months. 'In June, private sector firms encountered sharply rising operating costs, but selling price inflation slowed notably. This suggests a willingness among businesses to absorb some costs to bolster sales. 'The employment landscape remained broadly stable compared to the previous month, with sector data continuing to highlight diverging trends between manufacturers and service providers.' The UK as a whole saw output growth rise to a nine-month high, the tracker found, driven by expansions in business activity across eight of the 12 nations and regions monitored by the survey. Companies in Scotland recorded a ninth successive monthly fall in incoming new orders during June. The reduction in new work was centred on the manufacturing sector as services firms reported another expansion. UK-wide, new business rose for the first time in seven months. In Scotland, private sector companies remained optimistic about the year-ahead for activity in June. The degree of positive sentiment rose for a third straight month to the highest since October but was weaker than that recorded for the UK as a whole. Confidence across Scotland was supported by plans to introduce new product lines, improved operational performance, and strategic marketing efforts, the survey found. And after a slight rise in employment in May, Scotland's workforce numbers were broadly unchanged in June. Services firms reported increases in staffing levels amid upturns in new business and activity. However, this was offset by another month of job shedding at manufacturers. A near universal fall in headcounts was also recorded across the 12 monitored UK regions and nations, with Northern Ireland being the sole exception. Among the remaining areas, Scotland experienced the least pronounced drop in employment and one that was only 'fractional', RBS said. Since mid-2024, Scottish firms have continued to record a drop in backlogs of work, although June's rate of depletion was the weakest in eight months. RBS said that the fall is driven by a lack of orders in manufacturing which has allowed firms to complete outstanding orders. According to the survey, Scottish firms signalled another marked increase in average input costs during June. It found the rate of inflation quickened from May and was 'historically elevated'. Survey respondents often reported higher costs for materials, labour and energy, as well as rising supplier prices. However, the rise was less pronounced in Scotland compared to the UK as a whole. Firms north of the order also raised their output prices at a reduced rate in June. RBS described said the latest increase in charges was 'solid' but still amounted to the slowest rate in 11 months and was similar to the UK-wide average. Where higher charges were recorded, they were primarily attributed to the pass-through of increased operating expenses to customers.


BBC News
8 hours ago
- BBC News
Plan launched to tackle Fort William congestion problems
Consultants have been appointed to come up with a plan to ease congestion on Fort William's have been long-running complaints about gridlock, particularly on the A82, which runs through the town and is a major link connecting Inverness with engineering firms are expected to spend 18 months developing a package of priorities and potential funding sources for transport improvements.A previous study suggested emergency services staff faced delays getting to work and some teachers and pupils were late for school due to congested traffic. AECOM and Stantec have been tasked by Highland Council and regional transport body Hitrans to produce the integrated transport is part of a wider vision for Fort William and Lochaber area called Council's economy and infrastructure committee chairman Ken Gowans said the appointment of the consultants was a significant but long overdue said: "The appointment of AECOM and Stantec to take forward the integrated transport plan brings renewed momentum and a real opportunity to tackle the long-standing issues of congestion and connectivity that affect residents, businesses and emergency services alike."Mr Gowans added: "This plan is a key step in shaping a better future for Fort William and the wider Lochaber area."Transport Scotland the plan would explore measures to improve local connections, and journey times on the A82 through Fort William. 'Magic wand' Frazer Coupland, of West Highland Chamber of Commerce, welcomed the development describing it as a "lifetime opportunity" for Fort William and the wider Lochaber told BBC Scotland News: "We are a town of low resilience when it comes to our transport infrastructure."It only takes a small mistake to really congest the place up and gridlock us on occasions."A four to five-mile journey can take up to an hour if you go at the wrong times of day."Mr Coupland said everyone wished for a magic wand to sort out the traffic problems but added that it would take time to come up with solutions. In September, businesses warned that traffic congestion in and around Fort William was preventing them from Chamber of Commerce said getting through the town had been a problem for years but it was now at "crisis point".BSW Timber and fish farm company Mowi were among businesses which expressed frustration at delays at getting raw materials in and products Scottish government said at the time it had plans for improving travel through the town. Fort William is a popular Highland tourist destination as well as a base for industry, including an aluminium town has road and rail links to Inverness, Glasgow and Mallaig.A previous report, the Fort William Strategic Transport Study in 2018, set out some of the challenges to these reported congestion could get so bad through the town that emergency services staff and teachers could be prevented from getting to their work on firms said they had to put on extra vehicles at congested times to catch up with their timetable, while some residents avoided shopping in the town flow was highly seasonal with busiest months being May to August, according to the also told of their being only one way in or out of the town, which could present study said if there was an accident on the A82 just north or south of Fort William, motorists were faced with a 162-mile (261km) diversion via report also said improvements were constrained by the geography of the William has high mountains on one side, including Ben Nevis - the UK's highest mountain - and Loch Linnhe sea loch on the other.