Trump's tariffs add to fears in the UK's struggling steel towns

Trump's tariffs add to fears in the UK's struggling steel towns

e town of Port Talbot in the background”>Getty Images

What future for steel towns like Port Talbot?

But others think that clinging to steel jeopardises these towns’ futures.

Katie Bradley of the New Economics Foundation says that towns like Scunthorpe have more than one route to prosperity besides steel.

“With the right support, towns that have a connection to heavy industry can pivot to new, clean industries,” she argues.

Restructuring the UK’s steel operations might also help a former UK bastion languishing in the shadow of imported steel: car manufacturing.

Harland & Wolff, for example, reinvented itself after shipbuilding became unprofitable in the 1990s.

Getty Images Two shipyard workers walk past the giant cranes of Harland and Wolff in Belfast, Northern Ireland, July 2023Getty Images

Harland and Wolff, the former shipbuilder from Belfast, has successfully transitioned to new industries

There, the economy now revolves around wind energy and marine engineering – sectors enabled by the shipyard’s existing skills and supply chains.

Whatever they choose, the fact remains that steel towns are caught in a tangle of history, economics, global forces and politics. The bigger question is whether they will stick with the tried and tested – or make the leap to the unknown.

Read the full article from The BBC here: Read More