Tata Steel signs pact for sale of UK Speciality Steels ops
05 December 2016
Tata Steel clinched a pact with UK-based Liberty House Group that allows it to start exclusive talks for potential sale of its Speciality Steels business for an enterprise value of 100 million pounds subject to due diligence and corporate approvals.
Liberty House Group, led by India-origin businessman Sanjeev Gupta, had emerged as the frontrunner for the Indian steel giant’s UK plants when these were put on the block earlier this year.
The agreement covers some of Tata Steel’s South Yorkshire-based assets, including the Rotherham electric arc steelworks, the steel-purifying facility in Stocksbridge and a mill in Brinsworth as well as service centres in Bolton and Wednesbury in the UK and in Suzhou and Xi’an in China.
Speciality Steels employs nearly 1,700 people making steel for aerospace, automotive and oil and gas industries.
“The Speciality Steels business is independent of the pan-European strip products supply chain and today’s announcement is in line with the overall restructuring strategy of the UK portfolio,” said Bimlendra Jha, CEO of Tata Steel UK.
“This is an important step forward in seeking a future for Speciality Steels and we have reached this stage, thanks to the efforts of employees, trade unions and management. We now look forward to working with Liberty on the due diligence and other work streams so that the sale can be successfully concluded.”
The firm on Monday also revealed plans to pursue 85 million pounds worth of capital investments covering a range of “sustenance and improvement schemes”.
Jha also expressed the intent to continue to work closely with trade unions and communicate any material news on this issue to the employees on an ongoing basis.
The Liberty Group said its latest acquisition is expected to be complete by the first quarter of 2017, subject to various clearances, and will mark a significant step in realising Liberty’s GreenSteel vision, which promotes widespread melting and upcycling of UK domestic scrap metal, using arc furnaces powered from renewable energy sources.
Source – Tribune
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