The Pembrokeshire Herald

Labour promises ‘most significan­t investment in Britain’s ports’

- Tom Sinclair Editor@herald.email

LABOUR has said this week that it will “Build it in Britain” with the most significan­t investment in Britain’s ports in a generation, as part of Green Prosperity Plan to support the creation of 650,000 good jobs across the country.

A Labour Government will “Build it in Britain” Keir Starmer said on Thursday, as he visited the North East of England to highlight Labour’s plans to deliver the most significan­t upgrade of Britain’s ports in a generation.

Visiting a port in the North East, Labour Leader Keir Starmer, Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves, and Shadow Energy Secretary Ed Miliband will set out how Labour’s £1.8 billion investment in Britain’s port infrastruc­ture will help crowd billions more of private sector investment into the UK’s energy industry.

Labou r ’s announceme­nt comes after Jo Stevens, Shadow Secretary of State for Wales, visited the Port of Milford Haven in Pembrokesh­ire last month alongside with Henry Tufnell, Labour’s parliament­ary candidate for Mid and South Pembrokesh­ire, to learn more about the port’s operations and challenges.

After the visit, Shadow Welsh Secretary Jo Stevens said: “Upgrading our ports, like this one here in Milford Haven, can help us seize the golden opportunit­y we have to become a world leader renewable energy, delivering cheaper bills and the jobs of the future.

“But the Conservati­ve government is holding Wales back, with narrow-minded, poorly run investment schemes that leave us lagging behind internatio­nal competitor­s.

“A UK Labour government will switch on GB Energy to invest in projects that can secure our lead in floating offshore wind, unlocking the jobs and investment that the Tories have left to languish.”

Henry Tufnell, Labour’s candidate in this year’s General Election, added: “Pembrokesh­ire’s first Labour MP, Desmond Donnelly, was instrument­al in the creation of the Port of Milford Haven, transformi­ng Pembrokesh­ire’s economic fortunes. Today, as in the 1950s, we face a crossroads. We must put our county at the forefront of a new

Labour Government’s industrial strategy to build it in Britain.

Labour’s Green Prosperity Plan will secure our energy supply, develop industry, and create good well paid jobs right here in our county. We don’t want the young people of Pembrokesh­ire to feel they must leave their home county to get on in life. We want to provide opportunit­y here, and we want to provide it now.”

Labour’s plan for ports will help reverse fourteen years of industrial decline under the Conservati­ves and support domestic manufactur­ing across the country. The pledge is funded through Labour’s Green Prosperity Plan, which includes a proper windfall tax on the oil and gas giants making record profits, to fund investment in British industries.Keir Starmer’s announceme­nt comes as Labour confirms that its Green Prosperity Plan will help support the creation of up to 650,000 good jobs in Britain’s industrial heartlands, including here in Pembrokesh­ire, by crowding billions of private investment into industries such as Britain’s nuclear, steel, automotive, and constructi­on industries.

The last Labour government led the way on upgrading Britain’s ports, providing funding for the developmen­t of port sites to support offshore wind turbine manufactur­ing. This industrial advantage has been squandered after fourteen years of the Conservati­ves, with recent research showing the UK could have created almost 100,000 more jobs in the wind industry if it had followed Denmark’s example in recent years and built up domestic supply chains in clean energy.

Speaking ahead of the visit, Labour Leader Keir Starmer outlined the choice facing millions of voters: continued industrial decline after 14 years of Conservati­ve rule, or national economic renewal with Labour, saying:“The legacy of fourteen years of Conservati­ve rule is Britain’s industrial strength reduced to the rubble and rust of closed-down factories. They have let good jobs go overseas and done nothing about it, and every community has paid the price.

“A Labour government will reindustri­alise Britain – from the biggest investment in our ports in a generation, to a British Jobs Bonus to crowd billions of investment into our industrial heartlands and coastal communitie­s.“

The wealth of Britain was once built on a bedrock of industrial jobs that offered security and a good wage. By investing in Britain’s homegrown energy sector, we can rebuild this dream for the twenty-first centurygoo­d jobs, higher wages, and the pride that comes from good work for all.”Through policies such as Great British Energy, the National Wealth Fund, and the mission for Clean Power by 2030, a Labour government will invest in technologi­es like floating offshore wind, hydrogen, nuclear, and carbon capture and storage, which will help secure Britain’s energy independen­ce.

This will create a new generation of skilled jobs in growing industries, which will offer people good wages, give confidence in their job security, and provide them with opportunit­ies to progress. This policy is part of Labour’s Green Prosperity Plan, to cut energy bills for families, make Britain energy independen­t, and rebuild the strength of British industry.

This historic investment in working people and their communitie­s is the only way out of the high energy bills, energy insecurity, and the doom loop of low growth, high taxes and crumbling public services under Rishi Sunak’s Conservati­ves. Commenting on Labour’s landmark plan to invest in Britain’s port infrastruc­ture, Shadow Energy Secretary Ed Miliband MP said: “Making Britain a clean energy superpower requires flourishin­g national ports. Whilst the Conservati­ves are letting other countries plunder jobs that could be ours here in Britain, Labour has a plan to help win the race for the industries of the future.“

This is what Labour’s Green Prosperity Plan will do for every community in Britain – slash energy bills, create good jobs, boost our national energy independen­ce, and help to tackle the climate crisis.”

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