- The Knowledge
- Posts
- The British Steel debacle was inevitable
The British Steel debacle was inevitable
đď¸ Animal eyes | đŤ Titanic treat | đđ° Democratic decline
In the headlines
Ministers are scrambling to keep the Scunthorpe steelworks running after it emerged that the Chinese firm that owns it â Jingye â was depriving the UKâs last two strategically important blast furnaces of critical coal and iron ore. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds is now in direct control of British Steel after emergency legislation and the necessary materials are on their way to Scunthorpe. The British army has been called in to deal with the Birmingham bin strikes, which have left more than 17,000 tons of waste rotting in the streets. Military personnel will offer logistical support after five weeks of deadlock between the council and the workers union, Unite. Rory McIlroy won the Masters at Augusta National yesterday, making him only the sixth player to complete a career Grand Slam â victory at all four major golf championships â and the first to do it since Tiger Woods in 2000. The Northern Irishman, who hadnât won a major since 2014, said after his victory: âI started to wonder if it would ever be my time.â

Comment

Britainâs last two remaining blast furnaces in Scunthorpe. Getty
The British Steel debacle was inevitable
Keir Starmer detests everything about Boris Johnson, says Dominic Lawson in The Sunday Times. But hearing the prime minister endlessly proclaim that Britain will be a âgreen energy superpowerâ, I canât help thinking he might have something in common with the âgreat fabulistâ. The only race Britain is winning in relation to green energy is the ârace to deindustrialiseâ. Take the furore over British Steel: the Chinese owners Jingye are âno angelsâ, but theyâre not wrong when they say our âworld-beatingâ high energy prices (in part the result of green policies) make it impossible to maintain the UKâs last remaining âvirgin steelâ manufacturing plant without vast subsidy.
Now that the Scunthorpe steelworks are in the hands of the government â after Starmerâs entirely unnecessary âpolitical stuntâ of recalling parliament on Saturday â the taxpayer is on the hook for the âcoking coalâ required to run the machines. Thanks to Ed Milibandâs insane decision in November to block all new UK coal mines, including a spanking new facility planned in Cumbria to extract precisely this sort of metallurgical coal, the stuff is being shipped over from the Far East. It would be greener to simply dig it up ourselves, with the benefit of all the domestic jobs and tax that would generate. By contrast, Indiaâs minister for coal and mines (âyes, they have a minister especially for thatâ) recently celebrated on X: â1 BILLION TONNES of coal productionâ ensuring a âbrighter future for every Indianâ. What the Indians understand is that economic growth is powered by cheap, abundant energy. Miliband and Starmer, meanwhile, are so captured by Net Zero that theyâve even closed the North Sea to new drilling. No wonder Just Stop Oil says it has âwon its battleâ. It wonât take a global trade war to end Britainâs industrial power â our own perverse policies are doing that already.
Nature

This Wired video details the evolution of eyes in the animal kingdom, starting with the illuminating fact that ambush predators have âvertical slit pupilsâ to better pinpoint their targets, while prey species tend to have horizontal pupils, which are better at scanning the horizon for threats. Watch the full video here.
Youâre missing outâŚ
The rest of todayâs newsletter includes:
đđ° The latest casualty in Beijingâs suppression of Hong Kong
đ The booming business of getting nepo babies into college
đ° The unexpected benefit of our cashless society
Let us know what you thought of todayâs issue by replying to this email
To find out about advertising and partnerships, click here
Been forwarded this newsletter? Try it for free
Enjoying The Knowledge? Click to share
Reply