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Ministry of Defence

Milford Haven named as potential site for new UK munitions factory

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Pembrokeshire suddenly thrust into front line of UK rearmament drive after damning defence committee report saying is “nowhere near” prepared for war

MILFORD HAVEN has been confirmed as one of just two prospective sites in Wales for a major new UK munitions factory, as MPs warn that Britain is “nowhere near” prepared to defend itself from a modern military attack.

A hard-hitting report from the House of Commons defence committee, published early this morning (Wed, Nov 19), concludes that the UK lacks a coherent plan to protect itself or its overseas territories, at a time when security threats across Europe are “significant” and rapidly escalating.

The committee says the UK is failing to meet its NATO obligations and has fallen “far short of its claimed leadership position”. It raises particular concerns about Britain’s lack of air and missile defences, slow civil-defence preparation, and heavy reliance on the United States for critical military capabilities.

The report lands on the same day that the Ministry of Defence formally identified 13 possible locations for a new network of explosives and energetics factories – and Milford Haven is on the list.

Milford on a shortlist of 13 – and one of only two in Wales

Defence Secretary John Healey will this week unveil plans to return the UK to “war-fighting readiness”, restarting domestic production of energetics – the highly specialised explosives, propellants and pyrotechnics essential for modern weapons systems.

For the first time, the MoD has publicly listed the regions it is considering.

In Wales, there are only two candidates:

  • Monmouthshire, and
  • Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire.

Milford Haven’s inclusion places the town firmly inside a national defence restructuring effort worth £1.5bn and expected to deliver at least six new munitions plants before the 2029 General Election. Work on the first sites is intended to begin next year.

The MoD has not published exact site boundaries, but the Haven’s obvious candidate is the long-dormant armament complex at Newton Noyes/Black Bridge, a former Royal Naval Mining Depot with underground magazines, rail links and direct access to a deep-water port.

The depot, built in the 1930s and used extensively during the Second World War, remains one of the few purpose-constructed subterranean munitions storage systems in the UK.

Black Bridge, a former Royal Naval Mining Depot has been standing empty for years (Pic: File)

UK warned it is “not ready” as threats grow

The timing of Milford Haven’s appearance on the defence shortlist is striking.

After an 11-month inquiry, MPs on the defence committee warn that:

Britain has “next to nothing” in integrated air and missile defence,

the UK and Europe remain dangerously reliant on US support,

civil-defence preparations have progressed at a “glacial pace”,

and the UK’s ability to resist a modern armed attack may fall short of Article 3 NATO obligations.

Committee chair Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi said the public must be more honestly informed about the “level of threat we face and what to expect in the event of conflict.”

He added: “Wars aren’t won just by generals, but by the whole of the population getting behind the Armed Forces.”

Why Milford? Deep-water access, freeport status, and a ready-made site

Although no final decision has been made, defence analysts say Milford Haven has several features the MoD is likely to prioritise:

Deep-water access for shipment of munitions.

Existing hazardous-industry zoning due to LNG terminals and refineries.

Celtic Freeport status, offering flexible planning and tax incentives.

Historical armaments infrastructure, including covered tunnels and magazines.

Strategic position on the western flank of NATO’s air and sea routes.

The choice of Milford is also consistent with the MoD’s wider strategy to spread munitions and explosives manufacturing across the UK, reducing reliance on a small number of ageing sites such as Glascoed in Monmouthshire.

In Milford HAven, the most obvious candidate is the dormant RNAD Blackbridge / Newton Noyes complex on the banks of Castle Pill — the deep-cut tunnels and reinforced magazines built before the Second World War to store and load naval mines.

The site has been fenced off and unused for years, but remains one of the few purpose-built underground armament depots with direct deep-water access anywhere in the UK.

A site left empty after £685m renewable-energy plan collapsed

Locals will remember that Blackbridge only narrowly escaped a very different future.

In 2018, the site was tied to a huge £685m green-energy project proposed by Egnedol. The company had bought both the old armament depot and the former Waterston refinery with plans to build an advanced biomass and renewables complex expected to create over 500 jobs.

However, after an 18-month planning inquiry, Welsh Government ministers rejected the scheme. A planning inspector found the development would cause “unacceptably harmful” impacts on the local landscape, with major ecological concerns and “important shortcomings” in environmental data.

Since then, the tunnels and magazines at Blackbridge have remained empty, idle and largely untouched.

Now, in a dramatic shift of context, the MoD is considering bringing the site back to its original purpose — not clean energy, but munitions and explosives manufacturing.

Conservative Sam Kurtz MS was happy with the news. He said:” I’m pleased to see Pembrokeshire highlighted by the UK Government.

“Having written to the Secretary of State for Defence back in June to set out Pembrokeshire’s strategic importance, and having raised the issue on several occasions in the Senedd Chamber, this could mark encouraging progress for both our local economy and our national security.

“Pembrokeshire has a proud military heritage, and there is no reason it cannot be at the forefront of our military present and future. I will continue to work with Paul Davies MS to champion our County.”

Jobs boost – or risk to the Haven’s image?

A new munitions plant could bring hundreds of skilled technical and engineering jobs, along with guaranteed long-term MoD contracts and supply-chain work for Welsh firms.

But the proposal will divide opinion:

Some will welcome a stable, high-paid manufacturing base at a time when the energy sector is in transition.

Others will raise questions about safety, environmental impact, the Haven’s reputation as a tourism gateway, and the symbolism of returning explosives production to a town long known for its oil and gas terminals.

Environmental groups have previously warned that further hazardous development must be balanced carefully within the protected marine environment of the Haven waterway.

What happens next?

John Healey (pictured) is expected to provide additional detail in a speech on Wednesday, alongside confirmation of two new drone-manufacturing centres in Plymouth and Swindon.

The MoD says at least six of the thirteen shortlisted sites will be chosen for development, with construction expected to begin in 2026.

Local councils – including Pembrokeshire County Council and the Port Authority – are likely to be contacted shortly for technical assessments and land-availability studies.

A full public consultation is expected if Milford Haven is formally proposed.

For now, Milford is simply on the map. But for a town whose wartime tunnels have lain silent for 40 years, today’s announcement is the clearest signal yet that the UK’s new defence era may begin in places long thought forgotten.

Ministry of Defence

‘Houses shake’ as C-17 Globemaster tracked flying low over Haverfordwest

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RAF heavy transport aircraft JDW828 carried out training sortie over Pembrokeshire and the south-west

Residents in Haverfordwest reported a large military aircraft flying low over the town at around 11:00am on Monday (Jan 19).

Flight tracking information identified the aircraft as JDW828, a Royal Air Force Boeing C-17A Globemaster III, operating from RAF Brize Norton.

The recorded track showed the aircraft conducting a wide training circuit across the south-west, including repeated manoeuvres over parts of Pembrokeshire and Cornwall, before routing back east.

The C-17 is a heavy-lift transport used by the RAF to move troops, equipment and humanitarian aid, and is regularly seen on training flights across the UK.

One resident said: “It was a awesome sight, so low it was almost at the chimney tops – the house was shaking!”

“Brilliant!”

A request for comment has been sent to the Ministry of Defence.

Flightpath of the aircraft according to Flightradar’s website

(Images: Gavin Young/Herald)

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NATO jets scrambled as Russian aircraft approach UK airspace

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NATO fighter jets were scrambled today after Russian military aircraft approached allied airspace, in the latest sign of rising tension on Europe’s northern flank.

According to defence sources, the aircraft were detected flying close to NATO-controlled airspace over the North Atlantic and Norwegian Sea, prompting a rapid response from alliance air policing forces. Fighter jets were launched to identify and monitor the Russian planes, which did not file flight plans or communicate with civilian air traffic control.

The incident follows a familiar pattern seen repeatedly since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with Moscow increasing long-range bomber and reconnaissance flights close to NATO territory. While the Russian aircraft did not enter sovereign airspace, officials said the response was a routine but necessary defensive measure.

NATO confirmed that the scramble was carried out to “ensure the integrity of allied airspace” and that the situation was closely monitored throughout.

Pembrokeshire link to wider security concerns

The latest aerial incident comes against the backdrop of earlier Russian surveillance activity much closer to home, including off the Pembrokeshire coast.

During the summer, a Russian intelligence-gathering vessel was tracked operating off south-west Wales, raising concerns about undersea infrastructure and maritime security. The ship, identified by defence analysts as the Yantar, is officially classed as an oceanographic research vessel but is widely regarded by NATO as a spy ship used to map seabeds and monitor communications cables.

At the time, Royal Navy and RAF assets were deployed to shadow the vessel as it loitered in international waters near Pembrokeshire, an area through which critical transatlantic data cables pass. Defence officials said the ship’s movements were consistent with intelligence-gathering activity rather than civilian research.

Local marine observers and coastal monitoring groups also reported unusual naval and aerial activity in the area during the period, highlighting how global security tensions were playing out on Wales’ doorstep.

Further sightings off Scotland

In recent weeks, the same Russian vessel has again been detected further north, operating off the coast of Scotland, where it was monitored by Royal Navy ships and RAF maritime patrol aircraft.

The Ministry of Defence has since confirmed that UK forces have increased surveillance around the British Isles in response to sustained Russian naval and air activity. Officials have warned that undersea cables, pipelines and offshore energy infrastructure are increasingly viewed as potential targets in modern hybrid warfare.

Today’s NATO jet scramble is understood to be part of this broader defensive posture, with alliance forces on heightened alert as Russian military movements continue near European airspace and waters.

While no immediate threat to the UK has been identified, defence sources have made clear that both air and maritime activity are being treated as connected elements of a wider pattern.

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Ministry of Defence

Homes fit for heroes as over 100 military houses in Wales upgraded before Christmas

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MORE than 100 military family homes in Wales have been refurbished in time for Christmas as part of a UK-wide drive to address the poorest conditions in forces housing.

The work forms part of a programme to overhaul the 1,000 worst service family homes across the UK, a target that has now been met ahead of schedule. The scheme has also been expanded, with a further 250 properties set to receive priority upgrades by the spring.

The programme, known as Raising the Minimum Standards, has delivered extensive improvements to service accommodation across the country, including properties in Wales.

The upgrades include replacement boilers and heating systems, new flooring, repairs to leaking roofs, and the installation of new kitchens, bathrooms, windows and doors. In many cases, homes have undergone comprehensive refurbishment to address long-standing maintenance issues.

The work represents the first phase of the Ministry of Defence’s Defence Housing Strategy, which aims to modernise, refurbish or rebuild more than 40,000 service family homes over the next decade. The strategy is backed by £9bn of investment and follows a deal agreed last year to bring 36,000 military homes back into public ownership.

Defence Secretary John Healey said the improvements would allow more military families in Wales to enjoy Christmas in safe and decent accommodation.

“Our Armed Forces and their families sacrifice a great deal for the country,” he said. “The least they deserve are homes that are fit to live in. Completing upgrades to the worst properties means more families can spend Christmas together in decent conditions.

“This is only the beginning of a much larger programme to address decades of underinvestment in military housing.”

Secretary of State for Wales Jo Stevens said the improvements marked a positive start but acknowledged further work was needed.

“Military families in Wales deserve high-quality accommodation, and this is an important step towards improving homes that have been in need of modernisation,” she said.

David Brewer, chief operating officer of the Defence Infrastructure Organisation, said the work would continue beyond the initial phase.

“We have made improvements to the worst-performing homes, but this is just the start of a generational renewal,” he said. “Our aim is to see the vast majority of service family homes brought up to an acceptable standard.”

The refurbishment programme is one of several commitments made under the Consumer Charter launched earlier this year, which sets minimum standards for military housing. Other measures include improved move-in conditions, clearer maintenance standards, and the introduction of a named housing officer for every service family.

According to the MOD, early feedback from service personnel suggests satisfaction levels with military housing are beginning to improve, although wider upgrades remain ongoing.

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