The officials are working to deliver essential raw materials to the British Steel Scunthorpe plant, the government said, since it runs to maintain its burning explosions.
An emergency law Ran through Parliament on Saturday He gave control of the government of the Lincolnshire site to prevent its Chinese owner from turning it off.
The government said the work was running on Monday to obtain the coal chef and the iron ore that boost the two ovens of the plant, which previously said that the owners Jingye had been selling.
“My team is already working hard on the field to maintain jobs and ovens in progress,” said the Secretary of Business in a statement.
Business boxes, including steel, Tata and Rainham Steel producers, have offered help and supply their raw materials, the government added.
The speed with which the materials arrive at the site is important because the underpants can suffer permanent damage if their temperature falls too low.
Reiniciating an oven that has been closed is also an expensive and complex process.
Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said: “When I said Steelmering has a future in the United Kingdom, I said it seriously.
“That is why we have approved new powers to save British steel in Scunthorpe and that is why my team is already working hard on the field to maintain jobs and burning ovens.”
Comes after Reynolds He refused to confirm Sunday if the government could obtain the materials on time.
“I’m not going to get into that,” he told the BBCS Sunday with the Laura Kuensberg program, But he said that the acquisition cools the “opportunity” to obtain the necessary materials.
The Scunthorpe plant uses 2,700 people and is the last site in the United Kingdom that can produce virgin steel.
The accelerated law of the government that gave it control of the plant after the conversations with Jingye to save it seemed to break.
The company said in March that it was losing £ 700,000 per day on the site, which called “no longer financially sustainable” and began a consultation on its closure.
Reynolds told the BBC that “it became clear” negotiations that Jingye intended to close the high ovens regardless of the financial support offered.
The government said Jingye refuted an offer of about £ 500 million and demanded more than double money, with few guarantees that he would maintain the open plant.
“It may not be sabotage, it could be negligence,” Reynolds said about the company’s actions.
The conservatives have criticized the government for not entering before to save the plant.
Tory Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith said the party had supported the emergency law because it is the minor sausage option on the table. “