After securing funding in the UK, Tata Steel is looking for financial aid from the Netherlands government to execute its decarbonisation plans.
In October 2021, Tata Steel completed the process of separating Tata Steel UK and Tata Steel Netherlands as two independent companies from Tata Steel Europe.
“In the Netherlands, we will shortly be submitting the detailed decarbonisation proposal to the Dutch government seeking regulatory and financial support,” Tata Steel CEO & MD T.V. Narendran said.
Tata Steel Netherlands has been working intensely with the Government of the Netherlands on the contours of the decarbonisation project covering emission and health standards.
The detailed decarbonisation proposal will shortly be submitted to the Government of the Netherlands seeking regulatory and financial support which is critical for the company’s Dutch operations.
Both parties will then discuss the detailed conditions of the project, a Tata Steel statement said.
The board of Tata Steel will duly consider the project for approval at an appropriate time, it said.
The company did not elaborate on the decarbonisation plans it looks to undertake in the Netherlands.
In the Netherlands, the company has a 7 million tonne per annum (MTPA) plant in IJmuiden. The company’s goal is to produce CO2-neutral steel by 2050 in Europe.
On September 15, Tata Steel and the UK government agreed on a joint investment plan of £1.25 billion to execute decarbonisation plans at the Port Talbot steel-making facility in Britain under which it will install new plant machinery with low-emission technologies.
Of the £1.25 billion, the UK government’s contribution would be up to £500 million, Tata Steel said.
India-headquartered Tata Steel owns the UK’s largest steelwork of 5 MTPA at Port Talbot in South Wales and employs around 8,000 people across all its operations in the country.
PTI