The news arrives with all the grim inevitability of a Victorian tragedy: Tata Steel’s £1.25 billion electric arc furnace, the supposed saviour of British steelmaking, is beset by electrical delays. The fault, it seems, lies not with the steel itself but with the creaking, underinvested grid that powers it. One might be forgiven for seeing this as a metaphor for the entire British industrial project: a nation that once lit the world with its furnaces now cannot even plug in a new one without tripping over its own infrastructure.
Let us, for a moment, step back from the technical jargon and consider the deeper rot. The furnace delay is not an isolated incident but a symptom of a profound loss of sovereignty. When we speak of ‘British steel’, we invoke a memory of empire, of Brunel, of ships that ruled the waves. Today, we speak of it as a ward of foreign investment, a subsidiary of a Mumbai conglomerate, dependent on a grid that has been systematically starved of capital. The electrical delay is simply the latest reminder that Britain no longer controls the means of its own production.
Our intellectual decadence compounds the problem. We have convinced ourselves that a service economy, with its coffee shops and fintech startups, can replace the industrial backbone. Yet every nation that has lost its steel capacity has also lost its strategic independence. Consider the fall of Rome: the empire did not collapse because of barbarians at the gates; it rotted from within, its aqueducts crumbling, its mines exhausted. Our grid is our aqueduct. And it is crumbling.
What is to be done? The usual palliatives will not suffice. Subsidies and tax breaks are the opium of the complacent. We need a national industrial strategy that treats steel as a matter of security, not commerce. The French, with their national champions, understand this. The Germans, with their Mittelstand, embody it. We, in our dogmatic faith in markets, have outsourced our destiny.
The Tata delay is a warning. If we fail to act, the story of British steel will not be a tragedy but a farce. We shall look back on this moment as the day we chose convenience over sovereignty, shareholder value over national purpose. And historians will note that the empire died not with a bang, but with a failed electrical connection.








