The UK authorities will offer £350 million for a Critical Chemicals Resilience Fund to further support the country’s ‘strategically important’ chemicals producers. Authorities officials stated that the money will support companies remain competitive, modernise infrastructure, decarbonise and electrify their procedure. An extra £120 million of support will be focused to the ceramics sector.
‘At a time of worldwide uncertainty it’s never been more vital to make certain Britain’s resilience and back the industries our nation relies on,’ stated UK business secretary Peter Kyle. ‘This funding will help lots of jobs and placed business on a secure footing for the long term.’
In recent months the UK authorities has interceded, or been called on to assist, numerous foundational chemical plants in emergency situations. At the end of last year, it committed to a £150 million support package deal to keep the ethylene plant at Grangemouth in Scotland – the last such plant in the UK after ExxonMobil determined to shut its site in nearby Mossmorran.
More currently, the Ensus bioethanol plant in Teesside will temporarily reopen thanks to extra authorities support. This is to support meet the UK’s requirement for carbon dioxide in the course of shortages prompted by the conflict in the Middle East, since ethanol fermentation manufactures CO2 as a byproduct. The plant had closed in autumn 2025 after a UK–US trade agreement made imported bioethanol cheaper than UK supplies. At the time, the government rejected a bailout for the bioethanol sector after figuring out it was not within the national interest.
The latest investment comes in addition to measures targeted at directly reducing industrial energy expenses through exempting companies from levies on their energy bills, mentioned in the UK industrial strategy last year, elevated to cover approximately 10,000 producers in April 2026 and due to take impact from April 2027.
The authorities has stated that it will work intently with the chemicals industry to broaden the funding support, decrease regulatory expenses and make sure ‘policies deliver decarbonization not deindustrialisation’. Steve Elliot, chief executive of the Chemical Industries Association, welcomed this partnership with industry. ‘Much is needed– both in terms of policy and investment assist – to address the industry’s energy, carbon reduction and broader regulatory costs’.
‘The chemicals quarter is important, offering everyday products and as a part of the supply chain for many different economic sectors,’ stated Jonathan Oxley, who leads work on the energy transition on the Confederation of British Industry and is a trustee of the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). He says that the RSC ‘welcomes help for the strategically crucial chemicals sector and we will work with the authorities as its plans develop, making the most of opportunities to develop the skills of the workforces of the tomorrow’.






