Keir Starmer pledges £200m for Grangemouth oil refinery site | Trade unions

Keir Starmer has announced 200 million pounds in financing to enhance investment in Grangemouth Oil Refinery, which will conclude with a loss of more than 400 jobs.
The Prime Minister said that the National Resources Fund will provide 200 million pounds from investing in the state for up to five companies that moved to Grangman, where several thousand jobs in the broader supply chain are also dangerous. He said that he should benefit from 600 million pounds in private investment.
Speaking to reporters after announcing the annual conference in favor of the Scottish Labor Party, he rejected the remotely delayed proposals that have recently gave dozens of Grangman workers repetition notifications, or those who will be demobilized in the coming months.
He said that the Labor Party had acted as soon as possible, but it took time to continue a reliable proposal. “It is very easy to put suggestions on the table that does not carry water. What I want to do is to take the time to do this correctly.
“We are not talking about a kind of thing that roams people, and not something during the next three or four years. It is an opportunity for generations for Grancals.”
Soon the crisis in Granghamout became the largest political headache to work in Scotland: Workers’ union leaders accused the UK government of failing to act quickly, and the union members showed outside the party’s conference in Glasgow on Friday.
The Labor Party ministers in particular accuse the former conservative government and the Ministers of the Scottish National Party of being largely inactive, despite the knowledge that Granjal was scheduled to approach. Soon after the elections, it announced a growth deal worth 100 million pounds of the region agreed with the Scottish government.
The popularity of the Labor Party in Scotland has declined since it canceled the global winter fuel batches, refused to compensate the retirees from the ministers, raised the national insurance and was arrested in rows of unannounced gifts to Starmer and Rashil Reeves, the chancellor.
As the Scottish action of up to 18 % decreased in the polls, it faces the possibility of a fifth consecutive defeat by SNP in the Hollerod elections next year. The fate of Granjan will severely affect the sounds in the nearby seats.
Last week, John Sweeney, the first minister and SNP leader, added to pressure by announcing 25 million pounds in the Scottish government financing for Grangemouth “Just Transition Fund”, to add 7.8 million pounds in its current budget.
The leaders of the trade union urged both governments to invest extensively in new technologies such as sustainable aviation fuel and biofuels in Grangman. They see it as a major test to demand Ed Miliband that the UK government is investing in a fair transition away from fossil fuel.
The Secretary -General of the Unit, Sharon Graham, Starmer and Miliband, UK and Safi Energy Secretary, urged temporarily to seize Grangemouth from their owners, Petroineos, to stop job losses before transferring it to the production of green aviation fuel.
UK ministers said that there are major organizational and technical issues that prevent immediate development of green aviation fuel in the United Kingdom, due to their neglect by previous governments.
Miliband said that the Starmer Declaration showed that the UK government was serious in securing a viable future for the factory, the last oil refinery in Scotland. He said: “We have always said that we will not leave any unprecedented stone in the search for a sustainable artificial future for Grangemouth and its workers.”
Rose Foueer, the Secretary -General of the Scottish TUC, said that 200 million pounds cannot be rejected lightly, but threw the government to reject Graham’s proposals. She said: “This must be the priority from all governments, and not the procedures retroactively assume that closing the site is inevitable.”