Posted on 15 Jul 2015
POSCO puts $12b India steel project on hold
POSCO decided to temporarily suspend its already delayed $12 billion
steel plant construction project in India, company chairman Kwon Oh-joon
said Wednesday.
”We decided to tentatively stop the project as
we have not seen visible progress. The project will remain at all stop
unless the Indian government offers a better deal” Kwon told The Korea
Herald after an investors’ relations session in Seoul.
POSCO’s Indian project ― to build a factory with a 12 million-ton yearly
production capacity in Odisha’s Jagatsinghpur district ― has been
delayed for 10 years due to a backlash from residents, environmental
concerns and other reasons.
“For now, we are not backing the
project due to a number of factors there. If the situation changes for
the better, we’ll see what happens then,” a POSCO spokesman said.
The
stalled project met the biggest hurdle earlier this year when the
Odisha regional government decided to require all mining licenses for
iron ore and other minerals to be awarded via auctions.
Dealing a further blow, it was at odds with the Indian state government over a payment dispute for its construction site.
The
announcement was made after the group revealed it would refrain from
investing in new overseas upstream manufacturing projects, referring to
its blast furnace and integrated steel mill.
The spokesman
stressed that the company is “not pulling out” from India but is
shifting its focus from upstream to downstream manufacturing process
with processed materials.