Farage and Reform risk ruining Port Talbot and Wales

Tata Steel works at Port Talbot by Phil Beard
Reform Party will put up to 10,000 energy jobs at risk at Wales
From Energy Revolutions by David Toke
Nigel Farage’s fantasy promise to bring back steel blast furnaces and coal mining to South Wales is a cover up for his Reform Party’s policies to slash renewable energy jobs in Wales. (For our non-UK readers, Nigel Farage is a sort of British mini-Trump). You can read about Farage’s statement, made as part of the Welsh election campaign, HERE. In fact the Reform Party policies would demolish current Government plans to create up to 10,000 jobs in floating offsdhore wind. The Reform Party has said it would end Government funding for offshore wind and other renewables (See HERE).
The UK Government is in the process of awarding up to 5.4 GW of leases for floating wind projects off the Welsh and south-western seas of the UK (see HERE). Port Talbot is said to be in the leading position to provide essential port services for the windfarms (See HERE). Floating offshore windfarms put a particular premium on having a relatively local port where most of the construction can be expedited.
Associated British Ports said that a recent Government grant, allied to industrial investment, ‘will begin to unlock a projected £1 billion of investment in Port Talbot and the surrounding area. This will develop a green economic hub supporting and creating nearly 10,000 jobs in South Wales and across the wider UK supply chain’ (see HERE).
Remarkably, though, Farage seems to be getting away with burying the fact that this opportunity would be scrapped by a Reform-led Government. They are hiding this fact underneath a fantastical claim that Port Talbot blast furnace capacity would be reopened alongside provision of coal to fire them from Welsh coalmines (see HERE). In fact the closure of the last blast furnance at Port Talbot was said to be heavily influenced by the post-Brexit trade agreement. This led to tariffs and a quota on British steel exports to the EU.
Farage’s latest claim really takes the biscuit. How can the investment in a new balst furnace plant be justified after an exsiting plant was forced to close down? Moreover such a venture would be made even more unlikely by having to use British-mined coal. One of the reasons that the coal mines in Wales closed was that coal imports (which supplied the steelworks at Port Talbot) were much cheaper.
It is absurd to propose to put a lot of resources into assembling new blast furnaces that was already proving to be uneconomic. – Plus add a further layer of loss-making by compelling the venture pay for domestically produced coal. In its day the steel plant was buying cheaper coal imports.
It would certainly be an awful lot more practical to do floating offshore wind. That will be funded by a contract, from the Government, to supply electricity. More jobs would likely be created anyway. See my post ‘Floating wind can power UK to net zero’ HERE.
And, yet, it seems, people are being fooled (again). Farage fooled a lot of people in South Wales, first to vote against the EU, to the detriment of their interests. Now he is going to sucker them again with a promise to revive coal that will never happen. In doing so he will actually scupper the real possibilities of jobs in green energy via Floating Offshore Wind. Farage’s tactics echo those of Donald Trump and other so-called populists. Inasmuch as Farage’s policies look rational as opposed to made-on-the-hoof statements to distract public attenton, they are very backward looking. They hark back to an earlier disappearing age.
Reform Party Steam Engine Plan
I can reveal that I have come across (by accident) a draft of a policy plan by the Reform Party. It was sent to me by a contact in a railway preservation society. This is evidently an interest group which probably does not support Reform’s atavistic ideology as much as they think.
The Reform Party document acknowledges the great importance of railway preservation societies in the UK. I am told we have a lot more of them in the UK than in the whole of the rest of of Europe combined! To connect with this tradition Reform are proposing a radical new policy to confront university wokery.
The Reform Party would propose legislation that would ensure that all Universities introduce study and research programmes on steam engines. All universities must offer at least one course, in each Faculty, on steam engines. Sociology courses would still be allowed, but they should include some aspects of the steam engine and related industries. Steam engine research would be made one of the top grant awarding priorities for the Government’s research grant awarding body, United Kingdom Research and Innovation (UKRI).
The Reform Party report also laments the fact that as yet, they do not have a snappy sounding acronym as MAGA, as used by their American cousins in the Republicans. So someone has suggested that in the next English local elections Reform could use the acronym ‘MESA – Make England Steamy Again’. I have put further details of the Reform Party Report HERE for inspection.
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