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Lakshmi Mittal will fly into Paris on Tuesday for emergency talks with the president of France over an extraordinary industrial row in which the Indian steel magnates company was accused of lying and blackmail by a French minister.
The hastily convened meeting at the Elysée palace takes place a day after Arnaud Montebourg, the leftwing industry minister, launched a blistering attack on Mr Mittals company, ArcelorMittal, saying that he wanted the worlds biggest steel producer to quit France.
People close to Mr Mittal the steelmakers chairman, chief executive and main shareholder said he was extremely shocked by Mr Montebourgs attack, prompted by the companys plans to shut two blast furnaces.
French officials said they were unhappy with Mr Montebourgs inflammatory language, but insisted the minister was correct in claiming Mr Mittal had failed to meet commitments over the furnaces made in 2006 and 2009. ArcelorMittal denies the claims.
The dispute will deepen fears among international companies about a powerful strain of anti-business sentiment running through François Hollandes Socialist government. Mr Montebourg, a vocal critic of globalisation, launched similar public broadsides against the Peugeot family over the carmakers plans to close the Aulnay car plant near Paris.
The chief executive of one of Frances biggest industrial employers, who asked not to be named, told the Financial Times: Maybe hes being naive, but Montebourg is giving an image of France around the world which really isnt good.
In a French newspaper interview on Monday, Mr Montebourg said: We do not want ArcelorMittal in France, because they do not respect France.
He also accused Mittal Steel, which took over Luxembourg-based Arcelor in a 26.9bn deal in 2006, of lying and never holding to its engagements with the French state.
ArcelorMittal, which employs 20,000 people in France, wants to close the two furnaces at its Florange site in the industrial Lorraine region and make 629 workers redundant.
Speaking to Les Echos newspaper, the minister said: The violence and the brutality of Mittal; they are going to have to pay.
Mr Montebourg later tried to soften his comments, saying: When I said, We dont want Mittal in France any more, I wanted to say that we do not want its methods any more. But he added that those methods included blackmail and threats.
The plight of the Florange workers played an important part in this years presidential election, which Mr Hollande won on a pro-jobs platform.
Mr Mittal has given the government until December 1 to find a buyer for the Florange blast furnaces before he shuts them for good. He intends to keep the rest of the site, which employs 2,000 workers.
Mr Montebourg wants the whole site put up for sale, arguing that he can find buyers only for the entire facility. Should Mr Mittal refuse, the minister is threatening to nationalise the entire Florange site.
The government argues that the Florange closure breaks promises made by Mr Mittal during his hostile takeover of Arcelor, which was strongly opposed by ministers. It also says Mr Mittal offered explicit guarantees about Floranges future in 2009.
ArcelorMittal denies it made any binding commitments and says the closures are necessary because of plunging demand for European steel. Mr Mittal argues a sale of the entire Florange site would endanger the jobs of all of his 20,000 French employees because it is integral to the companys operations in the country.
Mr Mittals lawyers believe a state seizure is unlikely under French law. Mr Hollande raised the prospect of a factory act during his election campaign this year, which would force companies to seek buyers before closing profitable plants. But lawyers say it would be difficult to enact under the French constitution and EU laws.
Hermann Reith, a European steel analyst at BHF Bank in Germany, said Mr Montebourgs comments were not helpful and added that Mr Mittal had run his network of plants in a reasonable way while respecting broad undertakings to invest: Politicians have to realise that headcount can only be sustained if the plants are competitive in the long run.
Mittal and Hollande in ‘blackmail’ talks - FT.com
The hastily convened meeting at the Elysée palace takes place a day after Arnaud Montebourg, the leftwing industry minister, launched a blistering attack on Mr Mittals company, ArcelorMittal, saying that he wanted the worlds biggest steel producer to quit France.
People close to Mr Mittal the steelmakers chairman, chief executive and main shareholder said he was extremely shocked by Mr Montebourgs attack, prompted by the companys plans to shut two blast furnaces.
French officials said they were unhappy with Mr Montebourgs inflammatory language, but insisted the minister was correct in claiming Mr Mittal had failed to meet commitments over the furnaces made in 2006 and 2009. ArcelorMittal denies the claims.
The dispute will deepen fears among international companies about a powerful strain of anti-business sentiment running through François Hollandes Socialist government. Mr Montebourg, a vocal critic of globalisation, launched similar public broadsides against the Peugeot family over the carmakers plans to close the Aulnay car plant near Paris.
The chief executive of one of Frances biggest industrial employers, who asked not to be named, told the Financial Times: Maybe hes being naive, but Montebourg is giving an image of France around the world which really isnt good.
In a French newspaper interview on Monday, Mr Montebourg said: We do not want ArcelorMittal in France, because they do not respect France.
He also accused Mittal Steel, which took over Luxembourg-based Arcelor in a 26.9bn deal in 2006, of lying and never holding to its engagements with the French state.
ArcelorMittal, which employs 20,000 people in France, wants to close the two furnaces at its Florange site in the industrial Lorraine region and make 629 workers redundant.
Speaking to Les Echos newspaper, the minister said: The violence and the brutality of Mittal; they are going to have to pay.
Mr Montebourg later tried to soften his comments, saying: When I said, We dont want Mittal in France any more, I wanted to say that we do not want its methods any more. But he added that those methods included blackmail and threats.
The plight of the Florange workers played an important part in this years presidential election, which Mr Hollande won on a pro-jobs platform.
Mr Mittal has given the government until December 1 to find a buyer for the Florange blast furnaces before he shuts them for good. He intends to keep the rest of the site, which employs 2,000 workers.
Mr Montebourg wants the whole site put up for sale, arguing that he can find buyers only for the entire facility. Should Mr Mittal refuse, the minister is threatening to nationalise the entire Florange site.
The government argues that the Florange closure breaks promises made by Mr Mittal during his hostile takeover of Arcelor, which was strongly opposed by ministers. It also says Mr Mittal offered explicit guarantees about Floranges future in 2009.
ArcelorMittal denies it made any binding commitments and says the closures are necessary because of plunging demand for European steel. Mr Mittal argues a sale of the entire Florange site would endanger the jobs of all of his 20,000 French employees because it is integral to the companys operations in the country.
Mr Mittals lawyers believe a state seizure is unlikely under French law. Mr Hollande raised the prospect of a factory act during his election campaign this year, which would force companies to seek buyers before closing profitable plants. But lawyers say it would be difficult to enact under the French constitution and EU laws.
Hermann Reith, a European steel analyst at BHF Bank in Germany, said Mr Montebourgs comments were not helpful and added that Mr Mittal had run his network of plants in a reasonable way while respecting broad undertakings to invest: Politicians have to realise that headcount can only be sustained if the plants are competitive in the long run.
Mittal and Hollande in ‘blackmail’ talks - FT.com