What's the situation at Tata Steel?published at 10:20 British Summer Time 7 July
Mark Palmer
BBC Wales
Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds says resolving the situation with Tata Steel is "a priority" but the "the timescale is not a large one".
The previous Conservative government agreed a £500m rescue package to keep the plant open and shift to greener production methods, with the closure of two blast furnaces and a shift to electric arc production at Port Talbot.
Tata says its losing £1m a day on its blast furnace operation there, and the company closed one of the furnaces last Friday, with the second shutting in September - that will end Port Talbot’s ability to produce liquid iron from ore.
The company will build an electric arc furnace to produce steel by melting scrap metal, with construction set to begin in August 2025.
But as part of that, around 2,800 UK Tata jobs would go, the majority at its south Wales plant.
We’ve been told that Sir Keir Starmer and Welsh First Minister Vaughan Gething spoke about this on Friday.
We’re not hearing anything new from Tata at the moment, but local Labour MP Stephen Kinnock says there are people at the company who “are sensible and pragmatic and want to engage”.