The Asian Age

Tata Steel may get UK’s help

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London, July 2: The UK government is reportedly considerin­g a law change to plug a loophole in its pension laws to help Indian steel giant Tata Steel save jobs at its Port Talbot plant in south Wales, a media report claims.

A deal to reduce Tata’s financial burden in the 15-billion-pound pension scheme for its British steel business is central to a plan to save Port Talbot and keep it open, conceived last year by interim chairman Ratan Tata.

It is understood that the deal hinges on amending a quirk in the UK law that grants one group of retirees exceptiona­l benefits, ‘The Sunday Times’ reports.

Tata Steel is trying to slash the scheme’s costs by setting up a new retirement pot paying lower benefits.

The new scheme has been establishe­d as an alternativ­e to using the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) as Tata has offered to pump 550 million pounds into the scheme.

The steel pension fund has about 1,30,000 members — a legacy of when the industry employed hundreds of thousands of workers. Of these, about 5,800 are entitled to exceptiona­l benefits that were designed to bridge the gap between early retirement and reaching the state pension age in Britain. However, a loophole means that these members would be better off entering the PPF than joining the new Tata-sponsored scheme.

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