India's Tata Steel, the world's sixth largest steelmaker since its purchase of Britain's Corus group, said it aimed to more than double production by 2015 as it celebrated the 100th anniversary of its founding on Sunday.
Tata Steel vaulted to sixth from 56th place in the world steel output rankings with its 13.7-billion-dollar acquisition of Corus completed in April, and now has an annual production totalling 25.6 million tonnes.
By 2015, Tata Steel, flagship of the trucks-to-tea Tata corporate empire, hopes to add another 35 million tonnes to boost its world-wide annual production to 61.1 million tonnes, said Tata Steel chief spokesman Sanjay Chaudhry.
"We have MoUs (memorandums of understanding), these are the plans, we will go forward on them," Chaudhry said by telephone from the company's offices in Jamshedpur in eastern India.
The company expects to increase output by 28 million tonnes through planned greenfield projects in India and it has MoUs signed for projects abroad that would add another 7.5 million tonnes, he said. The projected output by 2015 "doesn't include any acquisitions that may come along," Chaudhry added. Tata Steel stunned industry watchers late last year with its bold offer for the far larger Corus, Europe's second-largest steelmaker.
The purchase, India's biggest-ever foreign acquisition, marked the high point of what Indian financial magazine Business World called Tata Group chairman Rajan Tata's "magnificent obsession" to expand abroad. The purchase was also seen as a sign that Indian companies, their coffers brimming thanks to an economy growing by a blistering nine percent, were ready to "go global" with big-ticket purchases. Chaudhry said Tata Steel was scouting opportunities for more acquisitions amid ongoing consolidation in the steel sector as companies seek cost-savings.
"We are looking around globally and when there is something good, then we would like to move," he said. "At any point of time we may have 15 to 20 proposals at various stages of evaluation." He said that digestion of Corus was going well. "While we may be two separate entities-Tata Steel and Corus, two business entities, we are looking at it with one vision, working as one entity."
His statements came as Tata Steel marked the 100 years of its founding with gala celebrations attended by employees in the city of Jamshedpur established by company founder Jamsetji Tata on August 26, 1907.
The anniversary comes just a month after Tata Steel reported record first-quarter profit of 305.5 million dollars, up 28.2 percent, boosted by sales to carmakers and construction firms Tata Steel, which harks back to the British colonial era, has helped underpin the Tata group's fortunes, becoming India's biggest private steel company and renowned for its cost-efficiency. Aside from being a savvy businessman, founder Jamsetji Tata had a strong social conscience. He accommodated his steel workers in a model company town in Jamshedpur and his employees worked just eight-hour days-unheard of in that era.
"He believed the primary purpose of an industrial organisation is to improve the quality of life of the community," says the company web site. Jamsetji passed on his philanthropic streak to his descendants who set up a charitable trust into which some of Tata's profits are still funnelled.