Tata Steel’s arm here said it had got $130 million as final settlement from the consortium of global steel buyers which had prematurely terminated, in May 2009, a 10-year purchase contract.
The arbitration tribunal upheld the Tata claim that agreement was not validly terminated. On January 5, Tata Steel UK received a partial final award in its favour. Tata Steel, in a statement issued to the stock exchanges in India, said, “Following that partial final award, a commercial settlement to all disputes relating to the offtake agreements was reached and on June 21, Tata Steel completed a full and final settlement of claims with the consortium of former offtakers. As a result of this settlement, Tata Steel has received an aggregate sum of approximately $130 million.”
This final settlement comes four months after Tata Steel UK sold TCP to Sahaviriya Steel Industries, a Thai company, in a deal valuing the business at $469 mn.
The consortium of four buyers which had withdrawn from the 10-year buying contract were Marcegaglia of Italy, Dongkuk of South Korea, the Swiss-headquartered Duferco and Alvory of Uruguay.