The Parliament will be recalled on Saturday to debate an emergency law to save the British Steel factory in Scunthorpe.
A government source says that it seeks to “take control” from the company, after its Chinese owner said that its high stoves are “no longer financially sustainable”.
Conferences took place this week so that production continues in the company, which employs 2,700 people.
Politicians left Westminster for their Easter holidays on Tuesday and should not come back before April 22.
The ministers had expressed a preference for a commercial solution to guarantee the long -term future of the factory.
But they had not excluded the nationalization of the company, saying that all the options remained on the table.
The House of Commons said that deputies would discuss the legislation proposed to “ensure the continuation of the operation” of the company’s high-fours, the last place in the United Kingdom where is made of superior quality steel.
The Lord Chamber is also recalled, seated from noon, an hour after the session that will start in the House of Commons.
Chinese company Jingye, who bought British Steel in 2020, said that she suffered financial losses of around £ 700,000 per day.
Last month, he started a compulsory 45 -day consultation on plans to lose jobs in his steel operations, blaming the conditions, very difficult “prices and costs associated with lower carbon production techniques.
But the government would have lost confidence in the company after an intervention on which will pay the raw materials so that the high stoves continue.
Industry Body UK Steel warned that the end of production on the Scantinpe site would see that the United Kingdom would lose vital steel capacities.