The company has shifted its employees from RPG Towers to its office at the group's headquarters at Worli. |
"The proceeds of the sale will be utilised to retire the debt on our books. Earlier also we have sold property for retiring debt," said R D Chandak, managing director, KEC International. |
Last year the company had retired debt to the tune of around Rs 70 crore. RPG executives said the value of RPG Towers was at around Rs 35 crore. |
KEC International's total debt stands at around Rs 650 crore. The company is also scouting for a buyer for its CETEX Petrochemical division, which has a turnover of Rs 25-30 crore. The proceeds of this sale, too, will be used to retire debt. |
Further, as a part of the company's restructuring strategy, it plans to trim its workforce by launching another voluntary retirement scheme (VRS) shortly. At present, the company's manpower stands at around 2,300. |
The company had earlier pared its workforce through a series of VRS schemes targeted at different sections of employees. |
"This time too we will follow a similar model and introduce specific VRS schemes," Chandak added. |
KEC is one of the world's largest power transmission, engineering, procurement and construction companies and has a presence in over 20 countries. Around 80 per cent of its revenues are generated from its overseas projects. |
The company's efforts to retire debt comes at a time when it has been making losses. KEC's losses for 2002-03 stood at Rs 9.53 crore. |
Meanwhile, KEC has bagged an order worth $36 million in Iraq for the restoration of electricity. The contract is for the reconstruction of the damaged 1,390 km long 400 kv Hartha-Qut transmission line project in south Iraq. |
The company will operate out of Basra to execute the order. The project entails fabrication, supply and erection of about 200 transmission towers. |
This is the first reconstruction contract in Iraq's power transmission sector to be bagged by an Indian company. |