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In The United Kingdoms, Tata has officially launched the process of putting up for sale its steelworks. The Indian conglomerate Tata, which is India\'s leader in this sector, has decided to throw in the towel in order to prevent the financial bleeding of its activities.
In The United Kingdoms, Tata has officially launched the process of putting up for sale its steelworks.
The Indian conglomerate Tata, which is India's leader in this sector, has decided to throw in the towel in order to prevent the financial bleeding of its activities.
So far, the only company to have publicly expressed an interest is Liberty Steel, owned by Sanjeev Gupta.
Thousands of workers in England and Wales risk losing their jobs if a deal cannot be struck.
However, the BBC understands that a City investment firm will agree to buy Tata's Scunthorpe plant on Monday.
Greybull Capital has been in talks to buy the business for several months and is expected to invest up to £400m.
The move would safeguard more than 4,000 jobs but workers are being asked to accept a pay cut and less generous pension arrangements.
Meanwhile, Mr Gupta said in an interview with the Sunday Telegraph that he felt there was "a very clear opportunity to turn things around, make money and create a sustainable business".
But he added: "I feel passionately about this and would like to do it, but I am not married to it.
"It is too big a deal for us to get wrong. It could put the whole company at risk."
Tata is known to want a quick sale. Business Secretary Sajid Javid said last week after talks in India that Tata had told him it would allow a reasonable amount of time" for the sale process.
He added that he expected other interested parties to come forward once the formal sale process had begun.
Sajid Javid was meeting Tata chairman Cyrus Mistry for the first time since the firm announced the sale a week ago.
Mr Javid, who was on a business trip to Australia when Tata first announced it was planning to sell its UK steelworks, is under pressure over his handling of the crisis.
The business secretary has admitted he was caught unaware by Tata's announcement, telling the BBC that while he had known the firm was reviewing its UK operations, the firm had gone "much further than we expected".
Unions have accused the business secretary of "taking his eye off the ball" and have called for him to stand down if a buyer for the steelworks is not found.
Tata Steel directly employs 15,000 workers in the UK, across plants in Port Talbot, Rotherham, Corby and Shotton, and supports thousands of other jobs.
German Group ThyssenKrupp has also been reported to be interested in acquiring part of Tata's UK steel operations.
Tata Steel has said there is "no fixed timeline" for the sale process, but has stressed that urgency is needed to avoid "a long period of uncertainty" for employees and customers.
The steel industry crisis has been driven by falling prices and a global oversupply. In the UK, high energy costs and cheaper Chinese imports have exacerbated the issue.
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