Stuart Wilkie, managing director of Tata Strip Products UK, is heading the buyout team which is on the hunt for private investors and government support for an official bid for the Port Talbot plant, which employs around 4,000 people.
The team's rescue plan reportedly centres around keeping the blast furnaces going, in contrast to a plan drafted by Indian-origin tycoon Sanjeev Gupta who is working on a bid for the unit by his Liberty House group.
Steel union Community said it was open to "discussions" with Wilkie and any management buyout option.
The option has support among a section of workers and others campaigning to save thousands of jobs.
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"Tata Steel Europe welcomes credible expressions of interest for Tata Steel's UK operations. It is our policy that we are not naming, confirming or commenting on any potentially interested investor or bidder at this point. All expressions of interest, including any Management Buy Out proposals, will be considered when received.
The company added that advisers to Tata Steel Europe had begun the initial exploration of interest in Tata Steel's UK operations with 190 potential financial and industrial investors worldwide.
Tata has already sold its Long Products Europe business at the Scunthorpe plant to Greybull Capital, which is also eyeing other units of the group's UK business such as Tata's specialty steels arm based in Sheffield, northern England.
The company decided to exit its UK business last month after suffering losses of up to 1 million pounds a day, largely due to Chinese steel exports forcing down prices in the steel market.
The UK government has been holding talks to find a solution and has indicated the possibility of co-investing with potential buyers, side-stepping calls to fully nationalise the steel industry.
The Tata Group has set a May 28 deadline to find buyers and has said over 190 potential investors have been approached about purchasing the business but kept the details confidential.