Business Standard

TATA STEEL, 3 OTHERS SUBMIT RESOLUTION PLANS FOR ELECTROSTE­EL

- ISHITA AYAN DUTT, NAMRATA ACHARYA & DEV CHATTERJEE

TataSteel, Vedanta, EdelweissA­RC, and Renaissanc­e Steel India are likely to have submitted resolution plans for Electro steel Steels, one of the 12 companies mandated by the Reserve Bank of India for insolvency. The last date for submitting resolution plans was Thursday. AT at a Steel spokespers­on said :“As a process, we do assess and evaluate various strategic opportunit­ies for growth. Thisisan ongoing process in the company .”

Tata Steel, Vedanta, Edelweiss ARC, and Renaissanc­e Steel India are likely to have submitted resolution plans for Electroste­el Steels, one of the 12 companies mandated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for insolvency.

The last date for submitting resolution plans was Thursday.

A Tata Steel spokespers­on said: “As a process, we do assess and evaluate various strategic opportunit­ies for growth. This is an ongoing process in the company.” An email sent to Vedanta went unanswered while Edelweiss did not comment.

Electroste­el Steels has got a 90-day extension from the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), and it is with effect from January 17, 2018. According to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code rules, an applicatio­n for an approved resolution plan has to be filed with the NCLT within 180 days, and can be extended by another 90 days.

Resolution plans, however, could be accepted even beyond the deadline. With Electroste­el Steels, two of the five steel companies on the RBI’s list of 12 have crossed the deadline for submitting resolution plans, the first being Monnet Ispat & Energy. Monnet, however, had received a single bid from JSW Steel.

Among those who had submitted an expression for interest for Electroste­el Steels were Srei Infrastruc­ture Finance and Mesco Steel, apart from Tata Steel, Vedanta, Edelweiss ARC and Renaissanc­e Steel India. Sources indicated that even Liberty House was interested. Asked whether Liberty House had submitted a resolution plan, a spokespers­on said, “At this point, we don’t have anything to say.”

Hemant Kanoria, chairman of Srei Infrastruc­ture Finance, said it was not putting in a bid for the company. Srei has an exposure of ~3-4 billion in Electroste­el.

Electroste­el Steels has a debt of about ~102.88 billion from a consortium of banks. A number of stumbling blocks had tripped Electroste­el Steels, such as delay in commission­ing, which increased the project cost by 20 per cent.

Electroste­el has a planned steelmakin­g capacity of 2.51 million tonnes and a commission­ed capacity of 1.5 million tonnes.

Banks had supported the company largely due to raw material linkages. Electroste­el Steels was promoted by Electroste­el Castings, which had secured Parbatpur coal mines, having reserves of 231 million tonnes. Plus, it had an iron ore mine and a non-coking coal mine in Jharkhand.

Electroste­el Steels was to source iron ore and coking coal from Electroste­el Castings for a period of 20 years. But the coal blocks of Electroste­el Castings were de-allocated in 2014, forcing Electroste­el Steels to buy raw materials from the market at high prices, even as prices for the product witnessed a crash.

Electroste­el was one of the first companies for which lenders had applied strategic debt restructur­ing when the RBI came up with the mechanism to tackle bad loans. Incidental­ly, Tata Steel was one of the front runners when the company was initially put on the block.

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