Teesside hustle
Deal of the century , Issue 1677
The Eye has learned that the deal being negotiated between US AI giant Anthropic and Teesworks Ltd, a company 90 percent-owned by local businessmen led by Chris Musgrave and Martin Corney, which has been given rights to exploit the regeneration by Tees Valley mayor Ben Houchen, includes the following terms:
- Anthropic will pay Teesworks Ltd £222m for 222 acres of land that the latter will itself acquire from Houchen's South Tees Development Corporation (STDC) for around £280 under an option it holds to buy land at £1 per acre (plus inflation from 2021).
- The AI company will pay Teesworks Ltd a further £40m for access to power from a private wire network controlled jointly by Corney, Musgrave and an independent power company.
- If a certain amount of power (equating to around 1,400 megawatts) is available from this network by 31 December 2029, Anthropic will pay Teesworks Ltd a further £166m; if delayed, this becomes £88m.
Minimal costs
The data centre deal will therefore soon yield £262m for Teesworks Ltd, and probably £428m in total in the not-too-distant future. The company may have to repay remediation costs incurred by the publicly owned STDC on the 222-acre site, but these are unlikely to reduce its gain below £400m.
Since Teesworks Ltd has already made £135m profits by cashing in on land and valuable metals left on the site (see Eye 1660's special report Stripped Tees last October, free at www.private-eye.co.uk/special-reports), the latest deal will see its haul pass £500m – and with more than 1,000 acres of developable land still available.
Watching their figures
Teesworks Ltd is owned 45 percent by Musgrave, 40.5 percent by Corney and his family, 4.5 percent by chartered planner Chris Harrison, and 10 percent by STDC – although profit-sharing arrangements mean the latter won't take any of the latest spoils – so Corney and Musgrave's shares will go well into nine figures.
Musgrave decamped to Dubai three years ago and, little seen in the UK, looks well positioned to extract his bounty tax-free.
More top stories in the latest issue:
RICH PICKINGS
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RADICAL CHEEK
Ofsted has quietly dropped the unevidenced claim in its training materials that children with autism are more likely to be radicalised, but it has not apologised.
APPY CRAPPY
Hundreds of Motability vehicle users have had their insurance cancelled after discredited “Drive Smart” tech flagged them as persistently dangerous drivers.
BLIGHT FUTURE
A stream flowing out of a Cold War US air base earmarked for more than 1,000 new homes has the highest concentration of “forever chemicals” in the country.
QUANTUM LEAP?
Salmon farmer Bakkafrost is generating positive headlines after a run of bad press over poor welfare standards at several farms.
DEEP IMPACT
The University of Birmingham has paid a staggering £879,828 to lobbying and communications firm Lodestone over six years.
THROW SHADE
Litigious solar panel installer A Shade Greener is trying to force Meta to divulge the identities of members of a consumer complaints group on Facebook.
COLD BATH
A Christian charity has been evicting tenants using Section 21 eviction notices and selling their homes in the name of “enhancing financial resilience”.


























