Ceramics worker says industry 'needs support now'

Alex McIntyre
BBC News, West Midlands
Lee Blakeman
BBC Radio Stoke
BBC Sharon Yates has long red, brown hair just past her shoulders and wears black-rimmed glasses. She has a black top over a white and black striped top. Behind her are metal shelves, painted blue, to hold ceramics. Further back are rows of white mugs.BBC
Sharon Yates has worked for decades in ceramics and said the government needed to step in and help the industry

A ceramics worker has called on the government to "step in as soon as possible" to save the pottery industry in Staffordshire.

Sharon Yates has worked as a china cup handler at Dunoon in Stone for 33 years but said factories were "haemorrhaging" money, primarily because of rising energy costs.

It came after Royal Stafford, which employed 83 people, entered liquidation last month, while Portmeirion confirmed redundancies at its Stoke-on-Trent site.

A potential rescue plan was due to be discussed at a ceramics summit, held at Festival Park in Stoke-on-Trent on Friday, ahead of a government meeting next week.

Ms Yates told BBC Radio Stoke she was "hopeful" for a solution after the area's MPs raised the industry's struggles in Parliament.

"It needs the government to step in now, as soon as possible, to save the pottery industry," she said.

"We've got the heritage but we can't keep playing on that heritage. We've got to focus on the present and the future. There are factories producing out there now."

A pottery worker is working on a piece of clay. Fingers can be seen shaping the clay, which is light brown in colour.
The ceramics industry in Staffordshire has been hit by rising energy costs

Other companies that have experienced difficulties include W Moorcroft Ltd in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, which warned of possible job losses due to falling sales and a £120,000 rise in energy bills.

Ms Yates said pottery firms needed to be "protected" from the impact of rising energy prices to "keep the kilns lit".

"We've got to get together. It's been left to go on too long. People feel deflated because there are that many negative comments about Stoke-on-Trent and the pottery industry," she added.

Stoke-on-Trent City Council Three bottle kilns in a line on a building site with houses and trees in the background.Stoke-on-Trent City Council
The pottery industry has been central to the Staffordshire economy for hundreds of years

Ms Yates will be among those attending a meeting about the sector at Parliament on Tuesday, which will include representatives from energy companies and the minister for business and trade Sarah Jones.

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