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China’s Jingye Group in talks to buy British Steel

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BEIJING/LONDON: China’s Jingye Group is in talks to buy British Steel, it said on Monday, in a deal estimated to be worth £70 million ($90 million) that could protect thousands of British jobs. Any agreement would be of major political significance in Britain as it prepares to elect a new government on December 12. The lack of opportunities in northern England, where British Steel is based, is an election issue, as the social gap between north and south widens.


A deal is not yet finalised, Jingye said following a BBC report of an imminent £70 million ($90 million) agreement.


A spokeswoman for Hebei-based Jingye Group, a private company, said she was unclear about the value and whether further details would be announced this week.


Gareth Stace, director general of industry lobby group UK Steel, also said nothing had been finalised.


“I would be surprised if it did not get finalised,” he said. “But it’s not a done deal.” No-one from British Steel was immediately available for comment.


The company was put into compulsory liquidation on May 22 after Greybull Capital, which bought the firm for one pound from Tata Steel three years ago, failed to secure funding to continue its operations.


Its closure would impact 5,000 jobs in Scunthorpe and a further 20,000 jobs in the supply chain.


Turkey’s military pension fund OYAK said in August it had reached a provisional agreement to take over British Steel but that deal has not been finalised.


Henri Murison, director of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, set up to boost the economy in the north of England, said a rescue deal would be “very welcome news”.


He said it was time to embrace cooperation with China, which is extending its international reach through its Belt and Road global development strategy. Chinese companies have also bought a steel plant in Serbia and its sole copper mine.


Chinese ownership is contentious, especially in the steel industry. The European Union, which does not include Serbia, has sought to protect its own steel industry from competition from cheap Chinese imports.


Britain has said it will leave the economic and political bloc, but has yet to agree a departure deal. An advantage of Jingye, a multi-industry business specialised in iron and steel, is that it knows the industry and has the ability to invest, industry sources say. With 23,500 employees and registered capital of 39 billion yuan ($5.58 billion), Jingye Group ranks 217th among the top 500 enterprises in China. — Reuters


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