MUMBAI (Reuters) - South Korean steelmaker POSCO <005490.KS> and Shree Uttam Steel and Power Ltd have agreed to set up a 3-million-tonnes-per-year integrated steel plant in Maharashtra, the Indian firm said on Tuesday.
The plant would be the first in India for POSCO, the world's No.6 steelmaker, as it continues to battle regulatory hurdles for a decade-old project to set up a mega $12 billion steel plant in the eastern Odisha state.
Shree Uttam Steel and Power is owned by the co-promoters of Uttam Galva Steels Ltd
Both POSCO and ArcelorMittal
POSCO, which already has steel processing centres in the cities of Pune, Chennai and near New Delhi, has made little progress and could scrap the Odisha project after a new law made it costlier to source iron ore for the plant.
The proposed joint venture plans to set up the plant, to be located at Satarda in Sindhudurg district, in two phases and hopes to take advantage of an expected surge in steel demand in the country, the company said.
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An investment of about $1 billion is needed to set up a 1-million-tonne-per-year steel plant.
Shares in Uttam Galva, which processes hot-rolled steel to finished coils for domestic and export markets, surged as much as 16 percent in morning trade on news of the joint venture.
(Reporting by Aman Shah in Mumbai; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)