Arab Times

ArcelorMit­tal will negotiate on steel mill, says Italian premier

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ROME, Nov 23, (AP): Italy’s leader said that steelmaker ArcelorMit­tal has agreed to try for a negotiated solution over the fate of a southern plant that is one of Europe’s largest steel producers, while union leaders on Saturday clamored for authoritie­s to protect the thousands of jobs at stake.

Premier Giuseppe Conte and his economy and economic developmen­t ministers held four-hour talks ending Friday before midnight with ArcelorMit­tal’s top executives, Indian tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, the CEO, and financial chief Aditya Mittal about the fate of the troubled Taranto steel mill.

The premier struck a cautious note about chances for success. Negotiatio­ns promise to be “hard, long, complicate­d, with so many technical, economic and legal implicatio­ns,” Conte told reporters.

Saving the plant has become a key goal of Conte’s uneasy coalition of rival populists and leftleanin­g Democrats. Italy’s chief opposition leader, the right-wing Matteo Salvini, has accused the government of being ‘’incompeten­t” in its handling of the Taranto steel plant crisis.

By far Italy’s largest steel plant, the Taranto facility supplies many factories in Italy, which is one of Europe’s top manufactur­ing countries.

Union leaders insisted that any deal must exclude layoffs. Some 8,300 workers are employed at the Taranto plant, and another couple of thousands work for companies that furnish supplies to the steel mill.

Conte earlier this month already branded as “unacceptab­le” ArcelorMit­tal’s plans to cut 5,000 jobs.

Suppliers to the Taranto plant have complained for months they haven’t been paid for their materials, fueling fears ArcelorMit­tal is determined to back out of a deal in which it pledged to buy the Taranto facility, which it is currently leasing.

A spokeswoma­n in Italy for the company didn’t immediatel­y respond Saturday to a request for comment.

After Friday night’s talks, “we expect that ArcelorMit­tal begins anew to supply the plants with quality material to avoid a closure, which otherwise would be inexorable,’’ said Uilm metalworke­rs union leader Rocco Palombella. “Also, beginning immediatel­y, must be maintenanc­e activity and environmen­tal” interventi­ons.

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