Tata Steel Netherlands will face fines of almost €27 million ($28 million) if it doesn't take measures at its coke plaBy Charlotte Hughes-Morgan
The shift will comprise women employees for all the mining activities of the shift, including heavy earth-moving machinery
Tata Steel has initiated discussions with state-run miners NMDC and Odisha Mining Corporation (OMC) to secure future iron ore supplies as the company ramps up its domestic steel manufacturing capacity. Tata Steel will also operationalise two new iron mines namely Kalamang West and Gandalpada as part of its strategy to ensure raw material security, the company's Vice President, Raw Material, D B Sundara Ramam told PTI. At present, Tata Steel meets its entire demand for iron ore, a key raw material used for manufacturing steel, from six iron ore mines operated by the company in Odisha and Jharkhand. Ramam said raw material plan has been carved out as leases of four mines -- Noamundi iron ore mine (being operated since 1925), Katamati and Khondbond (since 1933) and Joda East (1956) -- are expiring in March 2030. While two other mines NINL (Mithirda) and Vijay II will continue to remain operational. The mines came along acquisition of NINL plant and Usha Martin's steel business, he .
Stock market crash: The Indian stock market crashed heavily on Friday, with the BSE's Sensex dropping 1,207 points or 1.48 per cent to its intraday low of 80,082
At 10:59 AM, the BSE Metal index, the top gainer among sectoral indices, was up 1 per cent, as compared to the 0.09 per cent rise in the BSE Sensex
The steel industry is clearly in a down-cycle
On July 25, a nine-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court ruled that states have the power to levy cess on mining and mineral-use activities. Tata Steel's petition seeks a remedy to this order
T V Narendran tells that in many ways second quarter of FY25 was the worst, but Q3 also comes with challenges
T V Narendran, chief executive officer and managing director of Tata Steel, said the global operating environment remains complex, with key regions experiencing subdued growth
Tata Steel on Wednesday reported a net profit of Rs 758.84 crore for the September 2024 quarter, helped by lower expenses. It had posted a net loss of Rs 6,511.16 crore in the July-September period of the preceding 2023-24 fiscal, the company said in an exchange filing. The company's total income rose to Rs 54,503.30 crore during the second quarter against Rs 55,910.16 crore in the same period a year ago. Tata Steel reduced its expenses to Rs 52,331.58 crore from Rs 55,853.35 crore in the year-ago quarter.
Q2 results today, November 6: Aadhar Housing Finance, Power Grid Corporation of India, and Jindal Steel & Power will be releasing their Q2FY25 results today
Domestic brokerages anticipate a challenging quarter for Tata Steel marked by lower steel realisations and regional pricing pressures
The plan was for the Tata Steel-owned site to be subject to a three to four-year-long decarbonisation plan to build an electric arc furnace which will make steel from scrap
Noel is the half-brother of the late Ratan Tata, and was already a key trustee of the Sir Dorabji Tata Trust and the Sir Ratan Tata Trust
Ratan Tata News: Tata Chemicals, Indian Hotels Company, Tejas Networks, Voltas, Tata Elxsi and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) were up in the range of 1 per cent to 4 per cent
The Nifty Metal index, the top loser among sectoral indices, was down 2 per cent, as compared to the 0.35 per cent rise in the Nifty 50, at 9:53 AM.
Thus far in CY24, Voltas (up 81%), Tata Investment Corporation (53%), Tejas Networks (31%), Tata Power (35%), Nelco (20%),Tata Steel (18%) and Tata Communications (13%) have outperformed the Sensex.
EU competition enforcer said the deal, which had aimed to tackle over-capacity and other challenges in the steel industry, could result in price hikes
Tata Steel-owned Port Talbot plant in South Wales hit a significant milestone on Monday when its Blast Furnace 4 ceased operations after over 100 years, marking an end of "legacy" steelmaking as the UK's largest steelworks transitions towards greener steelmaking. Steelmaking at the site is now set to resume in 2027-2028 as part of a British government-backed investment programme of around GBP 1.25 billion in Electric Arc Furnace-based steelmaking, using UK-sourced scrap steel. The Mumbai-headquartered steel giant said it is looking ahead to a brighter, greener future for the historic site and sustaining more than 5,000 jobs. "I am deeply conscious how difficult today is for everyone associated with our business. Throughout this transition, we are doing everything possible to minimise the impact on all those who are affected by the changes we are making, Rajesh Nair, CEO of Tata Steel UK, said in a statement. Today marks a significant event in the history of iron and steelmaking in
With the current expansion, Tata Steel's capacity across sites in Odisha is at 14.6 mt. In Jharkhand, Tata Steel's capacity is at 12 mt, of which Jamshedpur Works is at 11 mt