Business Standard

Tata Steel’s Dutch unit workers oppose deal

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The works council of Tata Steel Netherland­s said on Friday it opposed preliminar­y plans by Tata Steel and ThyssenKru­pp to combine their European steelmakin­g operations into a joint venture and would fight to block it if necessary.

Works council chairman Frits van Wieringen said that, after viewing the two companies’ memorandum of understand­ing, he was concerned they intend to dissolve the Dutch subsidiary, which would strip away legal protection­s, and then lay off workers. “They are talking about 10 per cent of jobs being lost, but we think it will be much more than that,” he told Reuters.

In September the two companies announced plans to merge their European steelmakin­g operations. The joint venture would have 42,000 employees, with 10,000 in the Netherland­s.

The companies said last month the deal would help address overcapaci­ty in Europe’s steel market, which faces cheap imports, subdued constructi­on demand and inefficien­t legacy plants. The merger would also result in up to 4,000 job cuts, or about eight per cent of the joint workforce, they said.

Works councils in the Netherland­s and Germany have significan­t powers and their approval is required for a change of corporate structure to be carried out, Van Wieringen said.

“Make no mistake, the Germans are also opposed to this as it stands,” he said.

He said the works council expects to hear more detailed plans from Tata and ThyssenKru­pp early next year. For now it has notified the supervisor­y and management boards of Tata Steel Netherland­s that it will oppose the joint venture.

The firms had signed a deal for the joint venture to be named Thyssenkru­pp Tata Steel, which would be equally owned by both the parties. The transactio­n is expected to be finalised at the beginning of next year.

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