The Parliament will be withdrawn from Saturday to discuss an emergency law to save the British Steel plant in Scunthorpe from the imminent closure.
Downing Street said that the legislation would give the powers to “direct” English steel companies, to “protect” the Lincolnshire site.
The measure stops completely from the company completely of the company at this stage, but no 10 says that “all options remain on the table.”
The conversations have the legs to place this week to maintain production in the company, after its Chinese owner said that their underpants “are no longer financially sustainable.”
A NO 10 spokesman said that a bill of the steel industry (special measures) would allow the Government to “preserve capacity and guarantee public safety” on the site, the last place in the United Kingdom where the largest virgin steel is carried out.
“It also guarantees that all options remain viable for the future of the plant and the livelihoods it admits,” added the spokesman.
“We always have clean legs, there is a brilliant future for steel in the United Kingdom. All options remain on the table.”
The parliamentarians left Westminster for their Easter holidays on Tuesday, and should not return until April 22.
The House of Lores is also being withdrawn from the market, sitting from noon, an hour after the session will begin in the House of Commons.
The Chinese company Jingye, which bought British Steel in 2020, says it has financial losses of the legs of around £ 700,000 per day.
Last month a mandatory consultation of 45 days began on the plans to yield jobs in its steel manufacturing operations, blaming the “very challenging” market conditions, tariffs and costs associated with low carbon production techniques.
But the government must have lost confidence in the company after a confrontation on who will pay for raw materials to keep underway underway.
Industry Body UK Steel has warned that finishing production at the Scunthorpe site would see that the United Kingdom would lose vital steel capacities.