Government should help keep threatened coal mines open, says TUC
4 Apr 2014 11:44 AM
Commenting on the
government’s reaction to the announcement by UK Coal that it is planning
to close two of Britain’s three remaining deep pit coal mines, TUC
General Secretary Frances O’Grady
said:
“There is nothing stopping
the government from applying to Europe for permission to use state aid to save
Kellingley and Thoresby – and the thousands of jobs in North Yorkshire
and Nottinghamshire which depend on these mines staying open.
“The government says that
any plans to delay the pit closures must ‘show good value for
money’ but it will cost more to shut both mines than it will do to keep
them open. Just £60m would secure the future of several thousand jobs,
the communities surrounding the mines and the British coal
industry.
“If ministers do nothing
and allow the mines to close, the UK will become even more reliant on foreign,
mostly Russian, coal imports, and that means a worryingly insecure future for
the UK’s energy supply. Shutting the pits will also jeopardise any chance
the UK has of becoming a significant player in the emerging, multi-billion
pound market for carbon capture and storage technology.”
Yesterday the TUC and the coal
unions went to Brussels to seek clarification regarding claims made by the
Department for Energy and Climate Change that it is not possible for
taxpayers’ money to be used for a UK Coal survival plan. The European
Commission told the unions that there were no barriers to the UK government
applying to use state aid to save the mines.
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