Tata Steel Commits 10-Year Investment Plan For UK


LONDON: Indian giant Tata Steel today pledged to stay in Britain with a 10-year commitment to a one-billion-pound investment plan as part of crucial talks with steelworkers' unions to save thousands of jobs in the UK. 

The Indian steel giant offered a number of guarantees to its staff at Port Talbot steelworks in south Wales, the UK's largest steel plant, including a minimum five-year guarantee to keep both furnaces operational at the site.

Tata will next week start a consultation with its employees on a proposal to close the British Steel Pension Scheme, which has liabilities of over 15 billion pound, and offer employees a "competitive defined contribution scheme" in its place. 

The future of its UK business will remain contingent on a solution being achieved to the pension scheme. 

"Tata Steel UK has developed a long-term investment plan to make the business more competitive in the future. The delivery of the transformation plan in the next couple of years, combined with a structural solution for the British Steel Pension Scheme fund, is essential to provide the affordability and financial self-sufficiency for future investments and also service its financial obligation to its stakeholders," said Koushik Chatterjee, Group Executive Director Tata Steel and Executive Director for Tata Steel's European business. 

The company said the agreement between Tata Steel UK and the unions marks an important step forward in the journey to develop a "sustainable future for our UK steel business". 

Stressing that these are "unprecedented times for the steel industry globally" and therefore much more work remains to be done to make Tata Steel UK more "financially sustainable", he added: "The proposed changes to future pension provision and other employment terms are necessary to de-risk the company and help achieve long-term sustainability. We are also working separately on a necessary structural solution for the British Steel Pension Scheme fund. 

"The trade unions and the company have worked hard to reach today's agreement and I would like to thank them for their efforts and seek their continued support in the future. 

"We look to other stakeholders such as the UK Government to play their part in addressing the UK's manufacturing competitiveness position especially with relation to energy prices." 

Unions said they have been offered a number of guarantees, including a minimum five-year guarantee to keep both furnaces operational at the site, to safeguard jobs. 

Steelworkers will be balloted on the latest rescue deal struck by union representatives in the New Year. 

Details of the deal include a guaranteed, minimum five-year commitment to two blast furnaces, a 10-year 1-billion-pound investment plan to support steel making at Port Talbot, and a consultation on replacing the current British Steel Pension Scheme with a "defined contribution scheme" with maximum contributions of 10 pct from the company and 6 pct from employees. 

Tata Steel said both sides had agreed on the principle that subject to the structural de-risking and de-linking of the British Steel Pension Scheme fund from the business, Tata Steel UK will continue the existing blast furnace configuration at Port Talbot until 2021. 

Further, based on achieving the necessary financial performance and cash flows as per the transformation plan of the UK business, Tata Steel will continue to invest across the UK sites to enhance the competitive position of Tata Steel UK in the European steel industry.

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Source: PTI