The world’s largest steel maker, ArcelorMittal, is threatening to scrap a US$20 billion project to build two major steel plants in eastern India because of problems with land acquisition.
Chairman Lakshmi Mittal was quoted in Monday’s Financial Times as saying that delays in purchasing the land from farmers and others in the states of Orissa and Jharkand were “unacceptable.”
“If we cannot make progress in these two sites, we will have to abandon the idea of starting the projects there and look for other places in India for our expansion,” Mittal told the newspaper.
The saga has echoes of the problems encountered last year by India’s largest vehicle maker, Tata Motors, which was forced to shift the plant for its new, cheap Nano car from West Bengal to Gujarat amid farmers’ protests over land acquisitions.
India’s industrial expansion faces a problem in purchasing agricultural land for development, with farmers often unwilling to sell and regional politics fueling public anger at alleged commercial exploitation.
Mittal told the Financial Times people in India needed to be “educated” to understand the collective benefits of industrial development.
The two plants envisaged by ArcelorMittal would jointly produce around 24 million tonnes of steel by 2015.
HORMUZ ISSUE: The US president said he expected crude prices to drop at the end of the war, which he called a ‘minor excursion’ that could continue ‘for a little while’ The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Kuwait started reducing oil production, as the near-closure of the crucial Strait of Hormuz ripples through energy markets and affects global supply. Abu Dhabi National Oil Co (ADNOC) is “managing offshore production levels to address storage requirements,” the company said in a statement, without giving details. Kuwait Petroleum Corp said it was lowering production at its oil fields and refineries after “Iranian threats against safe passage of ships through the Strait of Hormuz.” The war in the Middle East has all but closed Hormuz, the narrow waterway linking the Persian Gulf to the open seas,
Nanya Technology Corp (南亞科技) yesterday said the DRAM supply crunch could extend through 2028, as the artificial intelligence (AI) boom has led the world’s major memory makers to dramatically reduce production of standard DRAM and allocate a significant portion of their capacity for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips. The most severe supply constraints would stretch to the first half of next year due to “very limited” increases in new DRAM capacity worldwide, Nanya Technology president Lee Pei-ing (李培瑛) told a news briefing. The company plans to increase monthly 12-inch wafer capacity to 20,000 in the first half of 2028 after a
Taiwan has enough crude oil reserves for more than 100 days and sufficient natural gas reserves for more than 11 days, both above the regulatory safety requirement, Minister of Economic Affairs Kung Ming-hsin (龔明鑫) said yesterday, adding that the government would prioritize domestic price stability as conflicts in the Middle East continue. Overall, energy supply for this month is secure, and the government is continuing efforts to ensure sufficient supply for next month, Kung told reporters after meeting with representatives from business groups at the ministry in Taipei. The ministry has been holding daily cross-ministry meetings at the Executive Yuan to ensure
RATIONING: The proposal would give the Trump administration ample leverage to negotiate investments in the US as it decides how many chips to give each country US officials are debating a new regulatory framework for exporting artificial intelligence (AI) chips and are considering requiring foreign nations to invest in US AI data centers or security guarantees as a condition for granting exports of 200,000 chips or more, according to a document seen by Reuters. The rules are not yet final and could change. They would be the first attempt to regulate the flow of AI chips to US allies and partners since US President Donald Trump’s administration said it rescinded its predecessor’s so-called AI diffusion rules. Those rules sought to keep a significant amount of AI