Chinese steel giant offers to pump $778m into PSM

Sinosteel frames plan to almost triple mill’s production capacity to 3m tons in 3-4 years


Peer Muhammad October 10, 2015
By taking over PSM, Sinosteel is not only targeting the Pakistan market to satisfy its growing appetite, but is also eyeing exports to neighbouring countries with the help of Pakistan’s ports and land routes. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD:


China’s largest steel company Sinosteel Corporation has offered an investment of $778 million in revamping and enhancing the production capacity of Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM) over the next three to four years.


“A delegation of the Chinese steel giant is currently on a visit to Pakistan and will meet Industries and Production Minister Ghulam Murtaza Khan Jatoi next week to present and discuss a plan for taking over management control of PSM,” an industries ministry official told The Express Tribune.



This is a follow-up to the July meeting between Sinosteel executives and the industries minister where the Chinese company had expressed interest in bringing the loss-making PSM back on feet and expanding its production capacity.

In response, the minister asked the Chinese to draft an operational plan for discussion and to enable the Privatisation Commission to take a decision.

Read: Pakistan Steel Mills: Hinting at cutoff, ECC approves another Rs1 billion

According to the proposed plan, sources said, Sinosteel would invest $778 million in PSM over the next three to four years to give a boost to its output as activity at the mill had slowed down drastically in the face of cash crunch.

In the first phase, Sinosteel will pump $170 million into the steel mill over a period of eight months to take annual output to 1 million tons. In the next phase, it will inject $373 million over a span of
18 months to take production capacity to 2 million tons annually.

In the third phase, it will provide $235 million to push the production of steel and its products to 3 million tons. At present, the mill has the installed capacity to produce 1.1 million tons.

By taking over PSM, according to sources, Sinosteel is not only targeting the Pakistan market to satisfy its growing appetite, but is also eyeing exports to neighbouring countries with the help of Pakistan’s ports and land routes.

The management control of PSM seems to be the most feasible investment for Sinosteel as the Chinese market has been largely saturated. This will also help the Chinese government and state-run companies to develop projects under the $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor in addition to using its own banks and human resource in PSM.

The interest in PSM came after a road show held by the Privatisation Commission in China to encourage investors to make capital injection into Pakistan’s gigantic industrial complex.

Sinosteel has a significant international presence as well as its ventures are running in India, Turkey, Iran, Vietnam and African states.

Read: Steel Mills: an ailing, sick unit on the govt’s balance sheet

The Sindh government has also expressed the desire to bring PSM into its fold if the federal government wants to privatise the mill.

However, an official in the Ministry of Industries and Production categorically said if PSM was privatised and management control was handed over to any investor, the federal government would not transfer ownership titles of 5,000 acres of the mill’s land to the investor whether it was the provincial government or any private concern.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 10th, 2015.

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COMMENTS (33)

Bobb mack | 9 years ago | Reply @ishrat salim: Let me say this if I may. If you are my fellow Pakistani (and following your reply to @Humza it does seem you are) your views are understandable and should be taken in the right spirit in. If you happen to be an Indian (you do not sound so) your response would have been understood differently. So I do not think HAMZA had meant any odffense.
Humza | 9 years ago | Reply @ishrat salim: The Chinese are probably more astute business investors than Indians which explains why their economy is still much better than India along with all the "Make in India" hype that is going nowhere. Chinese investment in Pakistan has to do with more than geopolitics because obviously the Chinese investors know they will turn a profit. So too when international financial institutions such as Moodys and others ( US and European) say that Pakistan's economy is improving, I tend to believe them more than you. Similarly for international reports that state the overall security situation is improving with less terrorism ( 70 % less). You may disparage the current democratic model and there is always room for improving our democratic system but why ignore the reality that Pakistan has made its first peaceful democratic tradition of power in elections. One of the few Muslim democracies to ever do so! Inflation right now is at a 13 year low and never before has a plan such as CPEC been conceived that will transform the nation. No one is talking about your family but I am more keen on the millions of Pakistani families who stand to gain jobs and opportunity for the improving economy that all the world except you see. Incidentally I don't live in Punjab where most people can see visible improvement in the economy and infrastructure. Even ask people in Karachi if the security system is better.
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