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Italy receives 10 bids on Ilva Steel as the major competitors withdraw

Italy receives 10 bids on Ilva Steel as the major competitors withdraw

Acciaierie d'Italia, the national steelmaker, said that Italy received 10 bids to buy the former Ilva Steel Plant. However, only two bidders were interested in buying the entire company.

The two groups who were originally frontrunners in the tender, Azerbaijan’s Baku Steel Company, working with Azerbaijan Investment Company, and India’s Jindal Steel International have now withdrawn.

Bedrock Industries is a U.S.-based investment company that has a private ownership, and Steel Business Europe, a Slovak steel trader, are the two bidders who remain interested in buying all of Ilva.

Eight other offers, including those from Renexia Group (Toto), Industrie Metalli Cardinale, and Marcegaglia, targeted individual assets held by Ilva. Ilva, a steel mill based in Taranto that was once Europe's biggest, has been plagued by poor management, and environmental concerns. Ilva has been in financial turmoil for years, and the state has repeatedly injected funds to keep it afloat citing its strategic value.

Italian media reported that Baku Steel had abandoned its investment plans because local opposition prevented the deployment a regasification ship needed to power its project for more environmentally friendly electric kilns. Jindal Steel is now focusing on Thyssenkrupp of Germany, who are also in the market.

The latest round of tenders closed on Friday at midnight. Acciaierie d'Italia stated that its commissioners will need "an appropriate period of time" in order to review all offers. They will focus on employment issues, decarbonisation and investment amounts, to ensure sustainable development of the facility.

The Italian metalworkers union UILM issued a statement in which it said that the tender was "a complete failure" and added that the two funds competing for Ilva's entire assets lacked any industrial credibility.

UILM stated that "to avoid the total shutdown of the former Ilva, and an unprecedented environment, employment, and economic disaster, the only way forward is nationalisation." (Reporting and editing by Barbara Lewis; Crispian Balmer is the reporter)

(source: Reuters)