So the great British steel revival has come to this: a spark, a fault, and a £1.25bn threat. Tata Steel, that venerable conglomerate, now tells us that its much-hyped electric arc furnace in Port Talbot might be scuppered by a critical electrical fault. One imagines the scene: bureaucrats in Whitehall frantically dialling engineers, politicians vowing to ‘get it fixed’, and union leaders denouncing corporate betrayal. Yet beneath the noise lies a deeper rot, a symptom of a nation that has lost its industrial nerve and now mistakes wishful thinking for strategy.
Let us not mince words. This is not merely a technical glitch. It is a parable. For decades, Britain has lived on the fumes of its past greatness, imagining that a few headlines about green steel and reshoring could revive a sector that was systematically dismantled from the 1970s onward. The Victorians would weep. They built empires on iron and coal, on the sweat of men and the brute force of machinery. Today, we rely on foreign capital, borrowed technology, and the goodwill of multinationals. And when the electricity fails, we panic.
Consider the broader context. The Tata plant at Port Talbot was supposed to be a flagship of the UK’s net-zero ambitions, a symbol of how old industries could be reborn in clean, efficient forms. Yet the electrical fault reveals a more uncomfortable truth: the infrastructure upon which such transition depends is itself fragile. The National Grid creaks, planning laws strangle new investment, and skilled labour is scarce. We are asking a 19th-century skeleton to run a 21st-century marathon, and then express surprise when a hamstring snaps.
But the fault lies not only in the cables. It lies in the culture. Britain has embraced what I call ‘industrial theatre’: grand announcements, glossy brochures, and ministerial photo ops. But theatre does not forge steel. It does not repair transformers. It does not train the apprentices who might one day fix such faults themselves. The truth is that we have, as a nation, lost the habit of making things. We prefer to trade, to finance, to arbitrage. And when a real, physical problem arises, we have no backups, no resilience, no collective memory of how to solve it.
Let us not blame Tata alone. They are a business; they will follow the money. If the UK proves too costly, too bureaucratic, too unreliable, they will walk. And why should they not? We have few cards to play. Our energy prices are among the highest in Europe, our planning system is a labyrinth, and our political class oscillates between grand promises and neglect. The electrical fault is simply the moment when the music stops.
The parallels with the Fall of Rome are, I admit, a favourite trope of mine. But here they are apt. Late Rome suffered from ‘barbarian’ invasions, but also from a collapse in technical competence: aqueducts silted up, roads crumbled, and the state could no longer maintain what it had built. Britain today is not so different. We have magnificent Victorian sewers and a crumbling modern grid. We have world-class universities and a shortage of welders. We have a Prime Minister who can give a stirring speech about ‘levelling up’ but cannot guarantee the electricity for a furnace.
What then is to be done? I will not offer a glib solution. The damage is generational, and a single electrical repair will not undo it. But we might begin by admitting the truth: that industrial revival is not a matter of press releases, but of hard, unglamorous, sustained effort. It requires a state that can build, a populace that values craft, and a patience that our instant-gratification age has forgotten. If Tata’s fault forces us to confront that reality, perhaps it will have served a purpose. But I suspect we will instead blame the EU, or the Chinese, or the weather. And the anvil will crack a little more.








