Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Securing supply: 2nd steel PLI in the works

- Subhash Narayan & Mihir Mishra subhash.narayan@livemint.com BLOOMBERG

The government is set to introduce a second production-linked incentive (PLI) initiative for the steel industry, aimed at bolstering the local capital goods industry and boosting supplies of essential materials in the country.

The expansion of the scheme aims to support the manufactur­e of capital goods and critical consumable­s such as refractori­es, low carbon and low loss of ignition fluxes, rollers, carbon capture units, coal and iron beneficiat­ion agglomerat­ion equipment, and other imported materials required in steel making.

The new initiative is currently in the final stages of discussion­s at the steel ministry, and is expected to be implemente­d before the end of the current year, after required approvals, including from the Union cabinet.

The draft proposal is expected to be ready by June after consultati­ons with Niti

Aayog and the department for promotion of industry and internal trade (DPIIT). Thereafter, it will be reviewed by an empowered group of secretarie­s, headed by the cabinet secretary, before seeking cabinet approval, said a senior government official aware of the developmen­t.

Government officials said the new PLI would be an extension of the current scheme, with a focus on capital assistance to produce special steel grades that are not covered by existing PLI provisions, or where no MoU have been signed so far. “The idea is to make the country’s steel sector self-sufficient to meet not only domestic demand but become an important centre to meet the steel needs of the globe. While PLI-1 provided incentives to promote the manufactur­e of special steel not being made in the country so far, PLI-2 will look to expand the list of special steel while also supporting domestic manufactur­ing of capital goods and consumable­s and meet the needs of the industry to a greater extent,” said the official cited above.

The proposal on PLI-2 is nearing completion after inputs were received from stakeholde­rs, including primary and secondary steel producers and the downstream steel segments from the empowered group of secretarie­s. As the process of getting approval and then cabinet approval would take about six months, the steel ministry expects that PLI-2 may be notified somewhere around December. It would then run for five years, as is the case with other PLI schemes.

 ?? ?? The expansion of the scheme aims to support the manufactur­e of capital goods and critical consumable­s.
The expansion of the scheme aims to support the manufactur­e of capital goods and critical consumable­s.

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