The Scotsman

Remember when every job was cherished?

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The Scottish Government’ s disdain for local manufactur­ing was evident again yesterday (your report, November 11). Its reaction to the reduction of capacity at the Grange mouth oil refinery, with the loss of 200 jobs, was almost welcoming.

The Infrastruc­ture Secre tary, Michael Ma the son, expressed textbook concern for those being made redundant but also used the opportunit­y to wish the petrochemi­cal company “a sustainabl­e future”.

Not so very long ago, every Scottish job was cherished because they all provided working people with the means for self-advancemen­t. Today our snobbish po li tical class hail only the “sustainabl­e”. The rest, like petrochemi­cals, are expendable. In another age a threat to Scotland’s petroleum independen­ce would have had nationalis­ts revving their engines with bumper stickers declaring “Fuel Freedom”. In this new woke world, energy security is readily traded for a speaker spot at COP26.

As the Scottish industrial base shrinks inexorably, so does our understand­ing of the key manufactur­ing jobs multiplier and the effect it has on both upstream and downstream employment; one job inside a petrochemi­cal plant can sustain 16 outside, which means 3,200 workers could now be under threat throughout the Central Belt, way more than the number employed in the entire Scottish offshore wind industry( fewer than 2,000).

Scotland is missing a modern industrial strategy to defend and expand our local manufactur­ing base. Endlessly providing government cash and support to foreign wind farm companies has proven a one-trick donkey with a broken leg.

CALUM MILLER Polwarth Terrace Prestonpan­s, East Lothian

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