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Business secretary backs shift to electric arc furnaces at British Steel plant

about 6 hours ago
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The business secretary, Peter Kyle, has backed a shift to cleaner electric arc technology at the state-controlled British Steel plant, raising questions about the future of the UK’s last remaining blast furnaces.Kyle said the government was “keen to see that transition happen”, as he works on a new steel strategy, which is expected to be published in December.A shift to electric arc furnaces at Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, would secure the future of steel production at the plant – under emergency state control since April – as the UK tries to meet its target of net zero carbon emissions.However, it would also raise doubts about the fate of blast furnaces that employ thousands of people, and the UK government’s previous pledges to preserve Britain’s primary steelmaking ability, producing steel from iron ore.When the government recalled parliament in April to take control of British Steel, it feared the site’s Chinese owner, Jingye Steel, was planning to close it permanently, with the loss of as many as 2,700 jobs.

Ministers have not yet outlined plans for Scunthorpe’s longer-term future,The government set aside £2,5bn for the steel industry in its election manifesto last year, but Kyle confirmed that it has already spent hundreds of millions of pounds of that money to keep operations going at British Steel and another manufacturer, Liberty Steel, which fell into insolvency in August,Kyle said the government had been forced to change plans as the global steel industry faced a slew of crises,“Britain is operating in a highly complex global environment, which includes, of course, the impact of tariffs, but also the impact of oversupply,” he said.

Donald Trump has caused chaos with trade levies, while a huge amount of steel has continued to flood global markets from China as it looks for other markets.Using up the money set aside for the steel industry would probably mean less money for capital investment.Nevertheless, asked if he thought there would be electric arc furnaces in Scunthorpe, Kyle responded: “I do.” He said he would provide more details in the government’s steel strategy.Steelworkers will be cautious of the plans after the experience of Tata Steel, which last year cut 2,500 jobs at Port Talbot, in south Wales, as it switched to electric arc furnaces.

The plan would also require a deal with Jingye, still the legal owner, to walk away.A move away from blast furnaces would also raise questions over the UK’s ability to make virgin steel.Jonathan Reynolds, Kyle’s predecessor as business secretary, repeatedly said the government was taking control of the Scunthorpe site to preserve “primary steelmaking”, the ability to produce steel from iron ore.Alasdair McDiarmid, the assistant general secretary of Community, a union representing steelworkers, said he welcomed “the government’s firm commitment to a just transition”.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionHowever, he added that it would be important to “maintain primary steelmaking capacity here in the UK”.

The UK has relied on blast furnaces to produce primary steel, but they generally vent huge amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.Electric arc furnaces, by contrast, use electricity to melt down scrap steel, not iron ore.The government is considering investing in a separate facility to turn iron ore into direct reduced iron (DRI), which is compatible with electric arc furnaces.That DRI could then be produced using clean hydrogen, preserving primary steelmaking ability with much lower carbon emissions.However, industry sources have cast doubt on the financial viability of such an arrangement.

Frank Aaskov, the director of energy and climate change policy at UK Steel, a lobby group, said it was “encouraging to see the secretary of state set out a clear future vision for the UK steel industry and British Steel”,He said the steel industry needs “a stronger business environment through lower power prices and robust trade policies”,Kyle spoke to the Guardian from Cardiff, where he was meeting small businesses to hear about productivity improvements using digital technology,He said the government wanted to play a “greater role” in coordinating AI training for companies,
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Why the NHS doctors’ strikes look set to continue

As resident doctors began a new round of industrial action on Friday, it felt very like the other 49 days of strikes since March 2023, with medics in scrubs on picket lines outside hospitals across England amid a battle for public sympathy.The British Medical Association claimed the stoppage was wholly justified while the health secretary, Wes Streeting, riposted that it was irresponsible and risky.Meanwhile, many thousands of patients had their appointments or surgery cancelled as hospitals attempted to minimise the disruption. They were collateral damage, as usual.It is now one of the longest-running disputes in NHS history

2 days ago
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Palliative care and choice must be at the heart of the assisted dying debate | Letters

Rachel Clarke is right to highlight the pressures on palliative care, but wrong to suggest that assisted dying debates have sidelined these concerns (As a palliative care specialist, I’ve witnessed the human tragedy of our end-of-life care crisis, 10 November). In fact, the opposite is true. The CEO of Hospice UK, Toby Porter, has stated that the government’s £100m investment in hospices, announced last December, would probably not have materialised without the terminally ill adults bill. He recently told a special Lords select committee that the bill has sparked more conversation about end-of-life care than at any point in his long career.The health minister, Stephen Kinnock, similarly acknowledged that the bill has been a catalyst for long-overdue improvements in palliative care, rolling the pitch for another announcement in the coming weeks

2 days ago
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Sectioned children face more trauma in the institutions supposed to protect them | Letter

I read with deep sadness the article by Kate Szymankiewicz about the death of her 14-year-old daughter Ruth (‘The ward felt like a prison. What had I let them do?’: how my daughter was crushed by a health service meant to help her, 8 November).As a parent of a child who has also suffered with an eating disorder, I recall the same feelings of horror at the loss of control while we saw our daughter sectioned three times under the Mental Health Act.Our daughter ended up in locked institutions for 15 months, where self-harm, suicide attempts and attempts at absconding were the norm.She was the same age as Ruth when sectioned, far away from home, and without access to therapeutic support because she was deemed too ill

2 days ago
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Maureen McGinley obituary

My sister Maureen McGinley, who has died aged 77, was a member of the Order of Columban Sisters, a progressive Irish Catholic order whose nuns train as doctors, nurses and teachers before going abroad.While serving in Hong Kong, Maureen made a significant and pioneering contribution to the care of people who are HIV positive. In 1994 she founded the Society for Aids Care (SAC), the first non-governmental organisation of its kind in Asia. It continues its charitable work to this day. Maureen devoted her life to the welfare of the people of Hong Kong from 1976 until 1999

2 days ago
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UK hospitals bracing for once-in-a-decade flu surge this winter

Hospitals are bracing for a once-in-a-decade flu season, with a mutated version of the virus that is spreading widely in younger people expected to drive a wave of admissions when it reaches the elderly.The threat has prompted NHS managers to redouble efforts to vaccinate staff and communities, expand same-day emergency care and treat more patients in the community to reduce the need for hospital stays.As resident doctors in England continue a five-day strike over pay, hospitals are turning to contingency plans to bring in consultants and other staff for extra shifts and reschedule appointments where necessary.“Last flu season was particularly nasty and we’re very concerned that this year could be even worse,” said Elaine Clancy, the group chief nursing officer for St George’s, Epsom and St Helier university hospitals. “We’re preparing for a spike of flu on to our wards

2 days ago
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Resident doctors begin five-day strike in latest walkout over pay

Thousands of resident doctors have begun strike action across England in a dispute over pay.The five-day action, which began at 7am on Friday, is the 13th walkout by doctors since March 2023 and health leaders have warned that the NHS may have to cut frontline staff and offer fewer appointments and operations if the strikes continue.The NHS Confederation and NHS Providers, which represent health trusts, said continued action was piling pressure on already-stretched budgets. The last industrial action in July was estimated to have cost the health service £300m.Patients would be forced to wait longer for care, and many may no longer be able to work without the treatment they needed, they said

2 days ago
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Kids have a wobble in the face of rabbit jelly | Brief letters

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Think autumn, think Piedmont – wine from ‘the foot of the mountain’

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‘I’m now a one-issue voter’: US shoppers fear Italian pasta tariff will cause shortage

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Jimi Famurewa’s recipe for puff-puff pancakes

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Polpa position: budget tinned tomatoes score well in Choice taste test

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Three plant-based chocolate mousse recipes by Philip Khoury

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