Tata Steel may hold on to its UK steelworks: report

UK government gives a series of offers to the company

May 30, 2016 12:00 am | Updated 05:40 am IST - London:

The report said PM David Cameron is keen to avoid a collapse in Britain’s steel industry—Photo: arunangsu Roy Chowdhury

The report said PM David Cameron is keen to avoid a collapse in Britain’s steel industry—Photo: arunangsu Roy Chowdhury

Tata Steel may still hold on to its UK steelworks and their proposed sale may be put off after a personal intervention by Prime Minister David Cameron, who is keen on averting the collapse of Britain’s steel industry ahead of the EU referendum, a media report said on Sunday.

The Sunday Times quoted sources as saying that a sale of Port Talbot in Wales, the UK’s largest steelworks, and steel mills owned by the Tata Group around the country, may be put off as the steel crisis prompted a series of offers from the UK government, including multimillion-pound loans and taking a 25 per cent stake in the business.

“Sources said a sale of Port Talbot, and steel mills around the country, was looking increasingly unlikely. Tata began contemplating retaining the vast south Wales site after personal intervention from David Cameron,” the daily said.

“The Prime Minister is desperate to avert the collapse of Britain’s steel industry ahead of the EU referendum on June 23,” it said.

Last week, the government proposed a law change to slash the liabilities of the 14 billion pound British Steel Pension Scheme, which is underwritten by Tata and has a 700 million pound deficit.

Annual rises in payouts from the final salary scheme would be linked to inflation as measured by the consumer prices index instead of the generally higher retail prices index.

The change would cut 2.5 billion pounds off the scheme’s liabilities, which its trustees believe would keep it out of the Pension Protection Fund and smooth the path to a sale of Tata Steel UK.

However, this and other government measures could help to reverse losses at Port Talbot, which were as high as 1 million pound a day last year, and persuade Tata to hang on to the business, sources told the newspaper.

However, the Tata Group has stressed it is “committed to the sales process”.

While the firm is yet to publicly reveal any shortlisted bidders for its UK units, the three still in contention are believed to be Liberty House, run by Indian--origin businessman Sanjeev Gupta, London family investment fund Greybull Capital, and Leeds-based turnaround fund Endless, believed to be backed by American billionaire Wilbur Ross. —PTI

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