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China steel giants plan merger in face of global glut
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) June 27, 2016


Voters approve controversial French airport site
Nantes, France (AFP) June 27, 2016 - Voters in western France gave the go-ahead Sunday to a controversial airport development that has been at the centre of a years-long battle between environmental activists and the government.

The local referendum on the new Nantes Atlantique airport passed with a 55 percent majority, ending a 50 year argument that saw the government's environment advisers resign in 2014.

Authorities argue that the new airport will provide a major boost to tourism in western France, but environmental campaigners have fiercely opposed the plans to build it on protected swampland just outside Nantes.

"Whether it is yes or no, we have made a decision," said one exasperated voter.

The former mayor of Nantes Jean-Marc Ayrault, a long-time supporter of the project, as well as an ex-prime minister and current foreign minster, praised the voters' decision Sunday evening.

"This is a clear vote on a project that has been so contested, so I think that today the message we can say is: respect the decision of voters from Loire-Atlantique," Ayrault told AFP.

The project involves transferring Nantes Atlantique airport to a 1,650-hectare (4,000-acre) site of protected swampland just outside the city.

Approved in 2008, the 580-million-euro ($747 million) project had been due to start in 2014 but has been repeatedly delayed by protests, which at their peak attached thousands of people and on occasion deteriorated into clashes with the police.

Two of China's biggest steelmakers are planning to merge, they said, as the industry faces a global glut that has hammered producers worldwide.

Baosteel Group, China's second-largest steelmaker, is "planning a strategic restructuring with Wuhan Iron and Steel Group", another giant, both companies' listed units said in separate statements to the Shanghai stock exchange late Sunday.

But the restructuring plan had not yet been confirmed, the statements said, without giving further details.

The two firms rank fifth and 11th respectively in the world.

Baosteel produced 36.1 million tonnes of steel last year, its website says -- more than Brazil and three times more than Britain, according to the World Steel Association, whose ranking shows that if it was a country it would be eighth in the world.

But Chinese steel demand has slumped as its economic growth has slowed and the global steel industry is assailed by huge overcapacity, which has plunged manufacturers into losses from Asia to Europe to the US, and seen political rows and accusations of dumping.

Shanghai-based Baosteel's net profit plummeted 83 percent to 1.0 billion yuan ($150 million) last year, while Wuhan Steel lost 7.5 billion yuan, compared with a 1.3 billion yuan net profit in 2014.

Beijing has vowed to eliminate 100-150 million tonnes of capacity -- out of a total of 1.2 billion tonnes -- by 2020.

"The merger of Baosteel and Wuhan Steel fits with the government strategy of improving efficiency and reducing competition and overcapacity," Xu Xiangchun, chief analyst at consultancy Mysteel Research, told Bloomberg News.

"With these two leading the effort there might be more mergers ahead."

Wuhan Steel chairman Ma Guoqiang denied speculation of a merger at a shareholder meeting earlier this month, the Beijing News reported.

Trading in both firms' shares was suspended on Monday.

azk/slb/dan

BAOSTEEL - BAOSHANG IRON & STEEL


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