Ispat Steel

{{Short description|Indian company}}

{{Use British English|date=March 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2023}}

{{Infobox company

| logo = Ispat Industries logo.svg

| name = Ispat Steel Limited

| traded_as = {{BSE was|500305}}
{{NSE was|ISPATIND}}

| industry = Steel

| foundation = {{Start date and age|1984}}

| defunct = {{end date and age|2013}}

| fate = Acquired by JSW Steel

| location = Kalmeshwar, Nagpur, India

| num_employees = 3,000 (2008)

| key_people = Sajjan Jindal (Chairman), B.K Singh (Chief executive officer)

| products = Sponge iron, Hot Rolled Coils, Cold Rolled Coils, Galvanized Sheets/ Coils, Colour Coated Sheets

| revenue = {{increase}} {{INRConvert|10578.69|c}} (2010)

| net_income = {{decrease}} {{INRConvert|-322.34|c}}

}}

{{for|Ispat International|Mittal Steel Company}}

Ispat Steel Ltd (ISL) was an Indian company with operations in iron, steel, mining, energy and infrastructure. In 2012, it was acquired by JSW Steel.{{cite news | url=https://www.thehindu.com/business/companies/ispat-merges-with-jsw-steel/article3848707.ece | title=Ispat merges with JSW Steel | work=The Hindu | location=Mumbai | date=2 September 2012}}

The company had two integrated steel plants, at Dolvi and Kalameshwar in the state of Maharashtra. The {{convert|1200|acre|km2}} Dolvi complex housed the 30 lakh tonne per annum hot rolled coils plant, which used the Conarc process for steel making as well as the compact strip process. The Dolvi complex has a captive port located close to it on the Amba River, which opens into the Arabian Sea, that can handle barges and mini-bulk carriers up to 4,000 Dead Weight Tonnage (DWT). Moreover, a jetty adjoining the complex is capable of handling cargo of up to 1 crore (10 million) tonnes per annum. It has a direct reduced iron – sponge iron plant, blast furnace, and compact strip production. The integrated steel plant at Kalmeshwar produced galvanised sheets and products and cold rolled coils. The Kalmeshwar complex houses a total of three advanced plants – a 3.25 lakh tonnes galvanised plain/galvanised corrugated plant, a 3.3 lakh tonne Cold rolled coils plant and a 60,000 tonne colour coated sheets plant. It had a cold rolling mill, galvanization line, and a colour coating line.

Ispat was the only steel maker in India and among a few in the world to have total flexibility in the choice of the steel making route - either via blast furnace or by electric arc furnace.{{Cite news | url=https://www.business-standard.com/article/companies/rise-fall-of-ispat-112091400016_1.html | title=Rise & fall of Ispat | author=Shubhashish | location=Mumbai | work=Business Standard | date=24 January 2013}}

Ispat means steel in Hindi and the Bengali language.

History

The company was founded in 1984 as Nippon Denro Ispat Limited by Mohan Lal Mittal.{{cite news | url=https://www.rediff.com/money/2002/jul/12ispat.htm | title=Ispat's Mohan Mittal makes way for son | first=Rumi | last=Dutta | work=Rediff.com | date=12 July 2002}}

It was granted the first industrial license by the Government of India for manufacturing galvanised plain/corrugated sheets. IIL was set up as a cold rolling reversing mill, in collaboration with Hitachi of Japan, to manufacture a wide range of cold rolled carbon steel strips.

In 1994, the family split its interests: the eldest son, Lakshmi Mittal continued managing the international operations as Ispat International (later called Mittal Steel Company), while Pramod Mittal and Vinod Mittal, the younger brothers, focused on steel and other businesses in India.{{Cite news | url=https://www.rediff.com/business/report/mittal-brothers-may-chart-their-own-course/20101222.htm | title=Mittal brothers may chart their own course | first1=Ishita Ayan | last1=Dutt | first2=Arijit | last2=Barman | author3=Shubhashish | work=Rediff.com | date=22 December 2010}}

In 1994, it commissioned the world's largest gas-based single mega module plant for manufacturing direct reduced iron (sponge iron), at its Maharashtra-based Dolvi plant, with a capacity of 1.6 million tons.

In 1995, hot strip mill with Continuous Strip Processing (CSP) technology was installed at Dolvi.

In 1998, an integrated steel plant for the production of hot rolled coils was launched, using technologies such as the Conarc Process for steel making and the Compact Strip Process. The company continued to increase capacity in the early 2000s; in 2003, a 2-million tonne blast furnace was commissioned and sponge iron capacity was increased from 1.2 mtpa to 1.4 mtpa.

During the early 2000s recession, heavy losses forced the company, as well as Essar Steel and JSW Steel, into debt restructurings.

However, the company was not able to implement a turnaround and in 2010, losses reached Rs 2,500 crore.

In 2010, JSW acquired a 41.57% interest in the company for 2157 crore and renamed it JSW Ispat Steel.{{Cite news | url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/jsw-buys-41-in-ispat-for-2157cr/articleshow/7141940.cms | title=JSW buys 41% in Ispat for 2157cr | first1=Reeba | last1=Zachariah | first2=Namrata | last2=Singh | work=The Times of India | date=22 December 2010}}{{Cite news | url=https://www.livemint.com/Home-Page/A37nJJVJPS26UanPQ0Q8hO/JSW-acquires-4129-stake-in-Ispat-Industries-for-Rs-2157-c.html | title=JSW acquires 41.29% stake in Ispat Industries for ₹2,157 cr | first1=Joel | last1=Rebello| first2=Harini | last2=Subramani | work=Mint | location=Mumbai | date=21 December 2010}} It acquired the remainder of the company in 2013 based on an enterprise value of $3 billion. The acquisition was described as a "bailout" for Ispat Steel.{{Cite news | url=https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/indl-goods/svs/steel/the-rise-and-fall-of-ispat-industries-in-kolkata/articleshow/7142434.cms | title=The rise and fall of Ispat Industries in Kolkata | first=Anuradha | last=Himatsingka | work=The Economic Times | date=22 December 2010}}

References