Tata Steel buys stake in Canadian miner for $22 million

Tata Steel's wholly-owned subsidiary in Singapore, Tata Steel Global Holding Pte Ltd, has entered into a binding agreement with New Millennium Capital Corporation of Canada to pick up a 19.9-per cent stake in the company for $22.6 million (Rs106 crore).

Tata Steel Group, the world's sixth largest steel producer, is consolidating its requirement of raw materials although its own raw material requirements for its 5-million tpa domestic capacity has been secured locally, its international unit, Corus is dependent on imported ore and coal to produce 18 million tpa.

To meet this, Tata Steel has been acquiring stakes in coal mines in Mozambique and Australia and an iron ore miner in Ivory Coast, which it has now enhanced with its latest acquisition move, as it also has the option to buy all the ore that is mined by New Millennium. The Canadian miner owns 80 per cent of the mine and is estimated to have reserves of around 100 million tonnes.

Tata Steel will acquire 19.9 per cent of the common shares of the expanded capital base of NML for $22.6 million. It has the option to acquire 80 per cent equity in NML's Direct Shipping Ore (DSO) project in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador and the province of Quebec.

The agreement provides exclusivity to Tata Steel with respect to both the DSO Project and the LabMag taconite iron ore property located in NL, which is 80 per cent owned by NML and 20 per cent owned by the Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach.

NML will use the proceeds of the private placement to primarily develop the DSO project through a definitive feasibility study to be completed in the second quarter of 2009.