TL;DR
Jingye Steel is seeking compensation from the UK government over the nationalization of British Steel's Scunthorpe plant. The company aims to recover over £1 billion under the UK-China investment treaty after failed negotiations.
The Chinese owner of British Steel has started a formal process under an international treaty to win compensation from the UK government over its decision to nationalise the Scunthorpe steelworks.
Jingye Steel said it would seek to recover money via China’s bilateral investment treaty with the UK, after more than a year of negotiations over the size of a potential payout. The dispute could put pressure on the relationship between China and the UK.
The decision to seek a resolution under the UK-China investment treaty is expected to give Jingye leverage in negotiations. In June last year it revealed it planned to try to recover as much as £711m in debts owed by British Steel, although people in the industry have said the company is seeking more than £1bn.
Keir Starmer announced the UK government was taking control of British Steel last April on national security grounds, saying it was crucial for the country to retain the ability to make steel from iron ore at the company’s plant in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire.
Insiders suggested that fears of 2,700 immediate job cuts in a historic British industry also played a more significant role. Jingye had planned to close the plant within days, rendering it impossible to reopen and leaving it with massive losses.
Since the takeover, Jingye has remained the economic owner of the plants. However, under pressure to resign last month after disastrous local elections, Starmer said the government plans to nationalise British Steel fully, in a rare expropriation of a privately owned asset.
“Jingye has recently initiated consultation procedures under the bilateral investment treaty with the UK government,” the company said in a statement on its WeChat account, according to Reuters.
The statement says the company hopes the UK government can fully safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Jingye and other Chinese businesses as well as global investors.