Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

ArcelorMittal calling off acquisition of Italian steel firm

ARCELORMITTAL said Monday (4) it was pulling out of the purchase of Italy's struggling steel firm Ilva after parliament scrapped a legal protection deemed necessary to undertake crucial environmental work without criminal liability.

The Taranto site is at the centre of a huge legal case in which experts cited by prosecutors have said some 7,500 people were killed in the area over seven years by diseases linked to toxic emissions.


The decision by LN Mittal owned company sparked outrage across Italy, with trade unions variously blaming the steel giant and the ruling anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S), which is a foe of big industry, for pulling the rug out from under the deal which would have safeguarded thousands of jobs.

"We're facing a real industrial, social and environmental disaster," said trade union CISL head Annamaria Furlan.

"We call on the government to intervene and the company to row back its decision," she said on Twitter.

AcelorMittal began leasing the plant with an obligation to buy it last November, and had plans to invest €2.4 billion to revive it, including €1.2bn to curb pollution by 2024.

The group was given a period of legal immunity to bring the plant up to environmental standards.

But after toing and froing the Italian parliament revoked it, and the company lost its immunity on November 3.

ArcelorMittal said it had a contractual right to withdraw from the deal as its ability to operate had been "materially impaired".

ArcelorMittal added that the local criminal court had ordered work that would have been impossible to complete on time, making the closure of a blast furnace inevitable.

"The shutdown would make it impossible for the company to implement its industrial plan, operate the Taranto plant and, generally, perform the agreement," said ArcelorMittal.

Industry Minister Stefano Patuanelli convoked a crisis meeting with fellow ministers in Rome, with sources saying the government "will not allow Ilva to close" and would "immediately summon" ArcelorMittal to the capital.

The company had previously warned removing immunity would force it to throw in the towel, despite having already begun implementing its clean-up plan, which includes enclosing conveyor belts and installing new quenching towers.

The steel plant employs over 8,000 workers in the poverty-hit southern Italian city, which suffers from high unemployment.

While environmentalists and families of cancer victims have long called for the sprawling plant to be shut, many locals had placed their hopes in ArcelorMittal turning it around- though the company had struggled to win hearts.

In June it temporarily laid-off 1,400 workers owing to sluggish market conditions with steel tariffs dampening demand across Europe.

The withdrawal could have political consequences for Italy's ruling coalition of the M5S and centre-left Democratic Party.

Italian firebrand Matteo Salvini, head of the popular far-right League, seized the opportunity to rail against the M5S in particular, which has long campaigned for closure of the steel plant and its transformation into a clean energy park.

The former interior minister slammed it as a "disaster" and called for heads to roll in the corridors of power.

Others, such as left-wing Free and Equal member of parliament Luca Pastorino, accused the company of using the immunity as "a pretext" for quitting because of the crisis in the steel industry.

(AFP)

More For You

Sainsburys-Getty

The company expects to generate £1bn in profit, with an underlying dip of around £36m, as competition intensifies across the supermarket sector. (Photo: Getty Images)

Sainsbury's warns of profit dip amid supermarket price war

SAINSBURY’s has forecast that profits from its retail operations may remain flat or decline over the coming year as it continues to reduce grocery prices.

The company expects to generate £1bn in profit, with an underlying dip of around £36m, as competition intensifies across the supermarket sector.

Keep ReadingShow less
Streeting pledges ‘future stability’
for pharmacy with £3.1bn funding
Wes Streeting delivered a video message
Wes Streeting delivered a video message

Streeting pledges ‘future stability’ for pharmacy with £3.1bn funding

HEALTH SECRETARY Wes Streeting said the new £3.1 billion funding package for community pharmacy was a “vital step forward” for the profession as it emerges from a decade of underinvestment and financial strain.

His remarks came at the annual Pharmacy Business Conference last week, attended by more than 240 delegates, including industry leaders who shared valuable insights on funding, independent prescribing, and the role of AI in community pharmacy.

Keep ReadingShow less
Gold

Gold had surged 3.6 per cent on Wednesday after US president Donald Trump ordered an investigation into possible tariffs on all critical mineral imports.

Getty Images/iStockphoto

Gold eases after record high as investors book profits

GOLD prices dropped over 1 per cent on Thursday as investors locked in gains following a sharp rise in the previous session.

The fall came ahead of a long weekend, although gold stayed above $3,300 (£2,481) an ounce, supported by a weaker dollar and ongoing US-China trade tensions.

Keep ReadingShow less
India’s diamond exports hit 20-year low amid weak US and China demand

India handles nine out of every 10 diamonds processed globally

India’s diamond exports hit 20-year low amid weak US and China demand

INDIA’S exports of cut and polished diamonds plummeted to their lowest level in nearly two decades in the 2024-2025 fiscal year, which ended in March, on sluggish demand from the United States and China, a leading trade body said on Monday (14).

India is the largest cutting and polishing hub, handling nine out of every 10 diamonds processed globally. But it is sensitive to economic uncertainty – particularly in the US, its biggest market.

Keep ReadingShow less
UK financial watchdog opens first offices in US and Asia

The international expansion forms part of the FCA's new strategy (Photo: Reuters)

UK financial watchdog opens first offices in US and Asia

BRITAIN's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has established its first-ever international presence with new offices in the US and Asia-Pacific region, the watchdog announced on Tuesday (15).

Former investment banker Tash Miah began working at the British Embassy in Washington DC in April. In her role, Miah will collaborate with the Department for Business and Trade to improve UK-US financial services policy and help American firms navigate British regulations.

Keep ReadingShow less