Indian steel-giant Tata Steel may be planning to close down the deficit-hit pension fund at the heart of its UK steel crisis, according to a media report today.
'The Financial Times' quoted people briefed on the issue as saying that Tata Steel intends to close the 15-billion- pound British Steel Pension Scheme to future contributions before a 60-million-pound payment deadline on March 31, 2017, in order to plug the mounting deficit.
A 60-day legally required consultation period means an official announcement of the closure is expected by the end of the month, the newspaper said.
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The future ofTataSteelUK and its nearly 11,000 workers have been on the line since the Mumbai-headquarteredfirm announced in March that it would be reviewing the future of the business.
The UK media has earlier reported that RatanTata, the interim chairman, is analysing whether to go ahead with a potential ThyssenKrupp joint venture deal for the Port Talbot plant in Wales - the UK's biggest steelworks - and proposals to sellTataSteel's specialitysteelarm, which employs 2,000 people in north-east England.
He is expected to make a decision within weeks.
The biggest obstacle in the way has been the BritishSteelPension Scheme, one of Britain's biggest with 130,000 retired and working members and a deficit that is expected to have increased significantly from last year's level of 700 million pounds.
A closure to future contributions would mean that those who have already paid into the scheme will be paid their pensions but further financial burden would be considerably arrested.
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