Jingye Group completes buyout of British Steel

The four blast furnaces at British Steel, Scunthorpe. Image courtesy of Flickr

Steelmaker Jingye Group completed its buyout of British Steel on Monday, the Chinese company said, reviving a business that was placed into compulsory liquidation last May.

A statement from Jingye said it had completed the acquisition of British Steel’s UK and Dutch assets from the official receiver and confirmed it planned to invest 1.2 billion pounds ($1.6 billion) in the company.

Jingye had said last week it would buy British Steel’s main plant, in the northern English town of Scunthorpe, even though it had not had a reply from the French government about a French unit seen as a potential obstacle to the deal.

“It has not been an easy journey since we first announced our intentions in November,” Jingye Chief Executive Li Huiming said.

France regards British Steel’s operations there as a strategic activity because it supplies railway company SNCF and said last week four bidders had expressed interest in buying that unit.

Jingye indicated on Monday it still hoped to buy the French operations at Hayange. “(It) is still subject to further negotiations with the relevant authorities in France and is hoped to be concluded separately,” the statement said.

The Chinese group said its investment plans included installing an electric arc furnace, building a more efficient power plant and launching a new line for steel rebar, a product mainly used in construction.

British Steel was placed into compulsory liquidation last May after Greybull Capital, which bought it for a token one pound from Tata Steel in 2016, failed to secure funding to continue its operations.

Globally the steel sector is under pressure from weak demand, aggravated by the impact of the coronavirus outbreak.

($1 = 0.7635 pounds)

(By Eric Onstad; Editing by David Goodman and David Evans)

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