From steelworks to freeport, Redcar’s redevelopment offers a model for moving on which Derby may wish to follow, writes Paul Ormerod
Derby has been a place where rail locomotives and rolling stock have been built for the best part of two centuries. A manufacturing capability was developed in the early 1840s, barely a decade after Stephenson’s Rocket had ushered in the rail revolution in transport.
But last week the managing director of Derby’s Alstom train-building plant announced that production is coming to an end. The next potential order is 18 months away.
In the same way that Derby is linked to railways, Port Talbot is synonymous with steel. But earlier this year the plant’s owners, the Tata conglomerate, announced the closure of its two blast furnaces at the cost of 2,800 jobs.
In each case, there has been great consternation about the impact on the local economy. Trade unions and others have come forward with rescue proposals as ministers get involved with crisis talks. But we have been here before, many times over. History just repeats itself.
Like Port Talbot, Motherwell in Scotland was a major producer of steel. Its Ravenscraig works had one of the longest lasting steel production facilities in the world. It closed in 1992. Likewise Redcar in North Yorkshire was dominated by its steel works for many years. The operation closed for good in 2015 after a long, lingering death.
There is no doubt that closures of major plants bring hardship to the local community. The impact is not just on the workers directly employed, but on the businesses which are part of the supply chain.
It is always tempting to provide subsidies to companies and industries which get into difficulties in the regions of the UK. They alleviate short-term distress. But the usual outcome is that taxpayers’ money is wasted. Sooner or later, the ailing firm either folds completely or decimates its workforce by bringing in new technology.
In complete contrast to these gloomy stories, last month Nvidia held its global artificial intelligence conference in California. It is in fact hard to imagine a more different setting.
The company’s founder and president, Jensen Huang, held up a prototype of Blackwell, a graphics processing unit of almost unbelievable power. “I’m holding around $10bn of equipment here,” he said.
The chip-making company, which is how we could describe it, was only founded in 1993. It now has a market capitalisation of over £2 trillion (trillion!). Its products announced last month deliver a huge upgrade to the AI infrastructure of the world.
It is blindingly obvious to say that not every company can be an Nvidia. But we need to recognise that prosperity can only be sustained by embracing the future, challenging and disruptive though it may be, rather than clinging on to the past.
In a modest but still very encouraging way, Redcar offers hope that these ideas are getting some traction in the UK.
When the steelworks closed in 2015, the government appointed Lord Heseltine to review how to regenerate the area. He created the South Tees Development Corporation, rebranded as Teesworks.
Last year, he and the Conservative Mayor for Tees Valley, Ben Houchen, ceremonially demolished the power station which supplied the steel plant. The area is now completely cleared and will become the UK’s largest freeport.
A local Labour MP, Andy McDonald, is seen as being on the left of the Labour Party. But he embraced the change: “We’ve had an era that provided great prosperity for the people of Teesside, we’ve now got to embrace the opportunities that are available to us in terms of green industries and renewable power, and all that goes with it.”
These are exactly the sentiments which are needed to take Britain forward. Otherwise, many towns in
the region will remain stuck in a spiral of decline.