News
MP welcomes new hydrogen project in Milford Haven
STEPHEN CRABB MP has welcomed news that £32 million of UK government money has been awarded to H2 Hydrogen project at the site of the old Murco refinery, building on the UK Government’s commitment to being a world-leader in hydrogen energy.
The project in Milford Haven will benefit from a £32 million project through the Hydrogen Allocation Round, which will support new jobs and investment across the area.
This project is one of 11 new hydrogen production projects that has secured £400 million of upfront private investment over the next three years, creating more than 700 jobs across the UK backed by £2billion in government funding.
The UK Government today announced backing for eleven major projects to produce green hydrogen across the UK – one of the 11 sites selected is in Milford Haven at the former Murco refinery.
This represents the largest number of commercial scale green hydrogen production projects announced at once anywhere in Europe, helping to place the country, and Pembrokeshire, at the forefront of this emerging industry.
In return for this government support, the successful projects will invest over £400 million in the next three years, generating more than 700 jobs in local communities across the UK and delivering 125MW of new hydrogen.
Today’s funding represents the most significant step in scaling up the UK’s hydrogen economy to date – speeding up progress towards the Conservative Government’s long-term ambition to deploy up to 10GW low carbon production capacity by 2030.
Commenting, Stephen Crabb MP said,
“I’m delighted to see Pembrokeshire once again at the top of the queue for UK Government funding. This £32m investment for the H2 Hydrogen project will kick start a new green hydrogen energy industry right here in Pembrokeshire.
I have been discussing the merits of the project with Ministers at the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero following my meeting with the company back in February. I recognised the project’s potential and the important role it could play in the Haven Energy Cluster.
This project will deliver jobs, new business opportunities and will supply green fuel across south west Wales – and it’s fantastic that it’s got the green light today.”
He added,
“Hydrogen has a key part to play in our future energy system and, with offshore wind power coming to the Celtic Sea, some of the key building blocks are being put in place for Milford Haven to become one of the country’s most important green energy ports. The Celtic Freeport will enhance this opportunity and help to attract even more investment the area.
This is an exciting time for local industry, the Haven energy sector – and this latest UK Government and private investment speaks volumes about the type of opportunities that are opening up right here in Pembrokeshire.”
Commenting, Energy Security Secretary Claire Coutinho said:
“Hydrogen presents a massive economic opportunity for the UK, unlocking over 12,000 jobs and up to £11 billion of investment by 2030.
“Today’s announcement represents the largest number of commercial scale green hydrogen production projects announced at once anywhere in Europe.”
“These eleven major new hydrogen projects across the UK will create over 700 jobs and deliver new opportunities from Plymouth in England to Cromarty in Scotland.”
Education
Closure of Ysgol Clydau approved after emotional council debate
COUNCILLORS WARNED RURAL COMMUNITIES WILL REMEMBER DECISION
PEMBROKESHIRE councillors have voted to close Ysgol Clydau following an emotional debate over the future of rural education and Welsh-language provision in the county.
The recommendation was carried by 32 votes to 21, with one abstention.
The decision followed strong appeals from several councillors, who warned that closing the school would damage village life, weaken rural communities and risk pushing some families towards home schooling.

Cllr Iwan Ward, the local member, opened the debate by urging councillors to reject the proposal.
He questioned whether the views of local people had genuinely been listened to during the consultation process.
“If the overwhelming concerns of local people have not been listened to, then what was the point of it?” he said.
“This was not a box-ticking exercise. It was a chance to listen.”
Cllr Ward said the people of Clydau had spoken “passionately and clearly” about the importance of the school.
“The school is not just a building,” he said. “It is the heart of the community, where families come together and where the Welsh language is passed on to future generations.”
He warned that closure would affect the viability of young families living in the area and said alternatives, including federation and other collaborative arrangements, had not been properly explored.
“As councillors, we have a responsibility not just to look at budgets, but at the people behind them,” he said.
Cllr Ward added that “local democracy does not end when this meeting closes,” warning that people would remember “who stood up for their communities and who chose to protect the heart of rural Pembrokeshire.”
He said the decision would affect communities “long after we have ended our terms, long after we leave this chamber.”
“Today, we have the opportunity to send a message that rural communities matter, Welsh education matters, and local people matter,” he said.

Rural schools ‘lost forever’
Cllr Anji Tinley also spoke against the recommendation, claiming there had been a wider policy of “starving” rural schools in order to support larger ones.
She warned that once rural schools closed, they were “lost forever”.
Cllr Tinley said she had “never known any other school” bring forward so many options publicly in an attempt to avoid closure.
She told councillors: “When are we going to wake up and listen?”
She said the issue was not simply about pupil numbers or finance.
“Children are more than a spreadsheet number on a desktop,” she said.
Her comments were met with applause from the public gallery.

Welsh language concerns
Cllr Huw Murphy, speaking in Welsh, reminded councillors that he had already made his position clear during a previous council meeting.
“Back in March, I said I would not support closing a school where the Welsh language is strong,” he said.
Referring to the upcoming National Eisteddfod in Pembrokeshire, Cllr Murphy added: “The National Eisteddfod is being held here soon, and I cannot support closing a school that can be seen from the Maes.”
He argued that pupil numbers alone should not determine whether a school remained open.
“Numbers are not the only reason for closing a school,” he said. “If that were true, we could close many schools.”
Cllr Murphy also rejected cost as a justification, saying it was inevitable that providing education in rural communities would cost more than in urban areas.
He pointed to Welsh Government ambitions to reach one million Welsh speakers by 2050, questioning whether any future administration would abandon that aim.
In an emotional intervention, he referenced the Manic Street Preachers song If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next.
“If we close this school, more will follow,” he warned.

‘Duty beyond politics’
Speaking in favour of closure, Cllr John Davies said the issue was not confined to Pembrokeshire, pointing to councils across Wales also considering school closures.
He said Conwy, Gwynedd, Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion were all facing similar pressures.
“Forget the parties in administration,” he said. “We have a duty beyond politics to all children in the county.”
Cllr Davies said there were around 2,000 fewer children in Pembrokeshire than a decade ago, and described the proposed closure of Ysgol Clydau as “extremely sad”.
He said the school itself had been created by combining two other schools, and recalled that when an extension was built there were 71 pupils on roll.
Cllr Davies said the decline reflected wider changes in rural life, including depopulation and changes in farming, with fewer but larger farms.
He added that the council had also closed schools in towns, and said members had a responsibility to all children in Pembrokeshire.
Recalling his own experience, he said he had been a pupil at Eglwyswrw when it closed in 1972, moving from a school of around 30 pupils to one with about 90.
He described that experience as positive and said this was what the council would seek to offer affected pupils.
Cllr Davies said only 14 pupils came from the school’s catchment area, adding that some parents had already “voted with their feet”.
“It is not councils that close schools,” he said. “It is parents who vote with their feet. There is some truth in that saying.”
He concluded by saying that, after 27 years on the council, he would “sadly” vote for closure because he did not believe the school was sustainable in the 21st century.
‘Soul of a community’
Cllr Phil Kidney said he could not support the recommendation, warning that some children would struggle if moved into larger schools.
He asked: “Are we setting these kids up to fail? Are we forcing parents down the home-schooling route?”
Cllr Kidney said he would be voting against the proposal.
Referring to a previous school closure in Penally, he said the local vicar had told him that when the school shut, children stopped playing in the village.
“It rips the soul out of a community,” he said.
Cllr Bethan Price praised the school’s social media campaign and said it had helped highlight the strength of local feeling.
She told the meeting: “We need to keep the Welsh language going.”
Cllr Price said she was there to support both the school and the Welsh language.
Her comments were also met with applause from the public gallery.
Support for closure
Cllr Paul Miller spoke in favour of the closure proposal, saying alternative Welsh-language provision remained available to families in the area.
He told members: “Alternative Welsh language provision is available.”
Cllr Miller added that he believed closure was in the best long-term interests of children living within the catchment area.
“I believe that closing the school is in the best long-term interests of pupils in that catchment,” he said.
Home schooling warning
Cllr Ward later responded by saying travel times were not the only issue, warning that many parents were now considering home schooling.
He said he had spoken to parents and believed as many as 50% of children could be home schooled if the closure went ahead.
Cllr Ward said: “I am not a fan of home schooling. It is not right. They need a school background and they need to be in school with other children.”
He warned the closure would have far-reaching consequences beyond the school itself.
“This will be devastating for Pembrokeshire and our local communities,” he said.
Several councillors warned the decision would be remembered by rural communities and could have political consequences at future elections.
Despite the objections, councillors voted 32 in favour of the recommendation, 21 against, with one abstention.
The recommendation was therefore carried.
Education
Manorbier school closure process to continue after narrow council vote
Questions remain over insurance, rebuilding costs and possible legal action by Diocese
PEMBROKESHIRE councillors have voted to press ahead with the statutory process which could lead to the closure of Manorbier Church in Wales VC School, despite warnings of possible legal action, strong community opposition and unresolved questions over the cost of rebuilding the fire-damaged school.
At a full council meeting on Monday (Jun 15), members voted by 30 votes to 23, with four abstentions, to continue with the proposal to discontinue the school.
The decision does not mean the school will close immediately. It allows Pembrokeshire County Council to move to the next stage by publishing a statutory notice. That will trigger a formal objection period before the matter returns for a final decision.
However, the vote followed a lengthy and tense debate in which councillors questioned whether they had been given enough information about the legal, financial and practical consequences of closure.

Legal threat
The school has been operating from Jameston Community Hall since a major fire damaged the original Manorbier school building in October 2022.
In recent days, the St Davids Diocesan Board of Finance, which owns the freehold of the school site, has stepped up its opposition to the closure plan.
Solicitors acting for the Diocese have warned the council that the process is, in their view, procedurally flawed. They have also placed the authority on notice that legal action, including judicial review, may follow if the proposal is ratified.
The Diocese argues that the school should be fully reinstated rather than closed, and says the council cannot simply return a damaged building and walk away.
It has also raised questions about whether insurance money from the fire should be used to restore the site, and whether the council has met its legal duties in relation to maintaining the school premises.

Questions over insurance
One of the biggest unanswered questions is why the school was not insured in a way that has allowed full reinstatement after the fire.
Councillors were told during the debate that major questions remain about the cost of reinstatement, the position of insurers, and the financial liability that could fall on the council if the school is discontinued.
Cllr Huw Murphy raised concerns about how members had reached this point, questioning how the council had ended up in an ongoing dispute with the Diocese.
He also referred to confusion around cost figures, including why councillors had previously been told figures could not be disclosed, before a figure understood to be in the region of £5m entered public discussion.
Several councillors questioned whether members were being asked to make a decision without all the facts in front of them.

Community opposition
The proposal has faced overwhelming opposition locally.
A consultation report showed that 252 responses were received, with 90.48% opposing the proposal to discontinue the school.
Parents, residents and campaigners have argued that Manorbier School is more than a building, describing it as a vital community asset and a nurturing environment for young children.
Objectors say closure would damage village life, reduce the attractiveness of the area for young families and undermine the long-term sustainability of the community.
Concerns have also been raised over transport, narrow roads, parking issues and the loss of the ability for some families to walk to school.
Supporters of the school have repeatedly argued that the fire should not be used as a reason to close Manorbier, and that the proper response should be to rebuild.

Education and learner experience
The Diocese has also challenged any suggestion that the quality of education at Manorbier justifies closure.
In a letter sent to councillors before the vote, the Diocesan Director of Education, Rev’d Canon Chancellor John R Cecil, said Manorbier had received a strong Estyn report while operating from temporary accommodation at Jameston Community Hall.
He argued that the council had not given sufficient consideration to the learner experience, and said managing surplus places did not automatically mean closing schools.
The letter also warned councillors that they needed “accurate and full information” before voting, drawing comparisons with Pembrokeshire County Council’s recent High Court defeat over its Article 4 direction, where judges found councillors had been presented with flawed and incomplete information.
Councillors split
During the debate, a number of councillors voiced concern about the process.
Some questioned whether the Diocese had been properly engaged with, whether the council had fully explored rebuilding options, and whether the legal risks had been properly explained.
Others argued that the council had to make difficult decisions in the context of falling pupil numbers, surplus places in nearby schools and the condition of the Manorbier building.
Council officers have recommended proceeding with the statutory notice, saying the proposal is based on the future sustainability of education provision, the availability of school places, the condition and suitability of buildings and value for money.
But opponents warned that the financial case for closure remains unclear if the council could still face major liabilities linked to the fire-damaged building.

What happens next
The council will now move to publish a statutory notice proposing the discontinuation of Manorbier VC School.
That will open a formal objection period, after which an objection report must be prepared and brought back to councillors before a final decision is made.
The Diocese has not yet confirmed whether it will take legal action following Monday’s vote, but its solicitors have made clear that judicial review remains an option.
For parents and campaigners, the fight is not over.
The key questions now are whether the school was properly insured, what the true cost of rebuilding or closure will be, whether the council can lawfully proceed in the face of Diocese opposition, and whether councillors will ultimately be asked to make a final decision under the shadow of a potential High Court challenge.
Community
The father, son and daughter lifeguard trio saving lives in Pembrokeshire
A FATHER, son and daughter are preparing to help keep beachgoers safe on the Pembrokeshire coast this summer as part of the same RNLI lifeguard team.
Tom Owen, 52, his son Cai, 19, and daughter Poppy, 17, are all RNLI beach lifeguards in north Pembrokeshire.
Tom joined the North Pembrokeshire team in 2022, with Cai following in 2023 and Poppy joining last year after turning sixteen.
Family effort
Tom is also the oldest lifeguard in the North Pembrokeshire team, but he has decades of experience around the water.
He first worked as a beach lifeguard for the local council in 1992, before the RNLI lifeguard service was introduced in Pembrokeshire in 2008.
Tom said: “I first had the opportunity to work as a beach lifeguard for the local council in 1992 before the RNLI’s lifeguard service was rolled out in 2008. My interest grew whilst in Australia, so I spent a couple of summers out there volunteering mainly for surf lifesaving clubs.
“Joining the RNLI has always appealed to me and now that my children are old enough, I took the opportunity to give it a go. It’s also lovely working alongside my kids. I’m really proud of what they have achieved, although I try not to embarrass them too much.”
Coastal upbringing
Cai and Poppy have grown up on the Pembrokeshire coast and have spent much of their lives in and around the sea.
Both have swum competitively for many years, competing at club and county level, while both are also surfers. Poppy has represented Wales at the Junior Santa Cruz Eurosurf in 2022, 2023 and 2024.
Cai said: “My most memorable lifeguard shift with my dad was when we cycled to work together, but on the way home my bike got a puncture.
“Dad cycled home and I had to walk back. But I really enjoy cycling to work in the summer with Dad and having the opportunity to be active and help others.”
Poppy said: “I really enjoyed my first season working on the beaches last year and can’t wait for this one to begin. I have already completed my lifeguard induction and have just finished my A-levels.
“It’s hopefully going to be a great summer working alongside my brother and dad, and in a special year as the charity celebrates the 25th anniversary of RNLI lifeguards.”
‘Give it a go’
Tom said age should not be a barrier for anyone thinking about becoming a lifeguard.
He added: “My age was never a consideration of mine when applying for the beach lifeguard job. I’ve always enjoyed working in a team and having the opportunity to be outside on my local beaches is brilliant.
“It’s hugely satisfying knowing I’m helping to keep others safe.
“I hope other people my age see that lifeguarding isn’t just for youngsters. If you’re still fit and healthy and love being at the beach, just give it a go, you won’t regret it.”
Since the RNLI lifeguard service began in Pembrokeshire in 2008, lifeguards in the county have saved 164 lives, aided 15,513 people and carried out 1,799 rescues.
Photo caption:
Family team: RNLI lifeguards Cai, Tom and Poppy Owen will be helping to keep Pembrokeshire beaches safe this summer (Pic: RNLI).
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