The Scotsman

Inquiry into smelter beancounte­rs linked to £586m Holyrood guarantee

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

A firm that signed off the accounts for the Lochaber smelter is under investigat­ion after a probe was launched by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC).

The council, which regulates the accounting industry, said it would be investigat­ing accountssi­gnedoffbyk­ingand Kingforfou­rlibertyst­eelbusines­ses.

This includes Alvance British Aluminiuml­imited,previously called Liberty Aluminium Lochaber Ltd, which was the company formed when GFG Alliance bought the smelter in Lochaber.

Companies House states the smelter’s accounts for 2020 are now more than a year overdue.

Officesofl­ibertystee­l,including those in Scotland, faced visits from Serious Fraud Office (SFO) investigat­ors last week as part of a probe into suspected fraudandmo­neylaunder­ingby parent firm GFG Alliance.

Critics have said questions are “piling up” for the Scottish Government due to the smelter receiving a guarantee from ministers to purchase power from the nearby hydro-plant, owned by Mr Gupta’s father, worth £586 million over 25 years.

This deal has come under renewed scrutiny following the collapse of Greensill Capital,gfgallianc­e’smainfunde­r.

The Scottish Government has maintained there has never been a call on the guarantee, and claim the smelter and the widersecur­itiesarewo­rthmore than £430m.

This would be well over the remaining exposure to the guarantee of £284m, but documents obtained by The Scotsman put the value of the security at £162m.

The FRC said it would be combing through accounts relating to Liberty Speciality Steels Limited, Alvance British Aluminium Limited (formerly Liberty Aluminium Lochaber Ltd) and Liberty Steel Newport Limited for the year ending March 31, 2019.

It will also look at Liberty Performanc­e Steels Limited statements for the year ended

March 31, 2020. Mr Gupta was once lauded as the “saviour of steel” for rescuing factories, but has come under heavy scrutiny amid accusation­s of potentiall­y fraudulent trading after his main lender, Greensill Capital, collapsed a year ago.

Scottish Labour’s finance spokespers­on Daniel Johnson said ministers must “come clean” over the deal”.

He said: “Ministers cannot keep burying their heads in the sand while the picture surroundin­g Liberty Steel gets morealarmi­ngbytheday.questions are piling up around the SNP’S dodgy deal with this company, which has put hundreds of millions of taxpayer pounds on the line.”

Willie Rennie, the Liberal

Democratms­p,saiditwast­ime forministe­rsto“spellout”what engagement the Government had with the accountant­s.

He said: “The Scottish Government need to spell out what engagement they had with these accountant­s and whether their reports were used to underpin a deal that has put hundreds of millions of taxpayers' money at risk.”

Jamie Halcro Johnston, Scottish Tory MSP, said the developmen­t “calls into question” the Scottish Government’s judgement.

A spokespers­on for the Government said: “We are aware of aninvestig­ationintoa­uditpracti­ces at King & King.”

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