Orissa earmarks land for Arcelor Mittal plant
BHUBANESWAR, India (Reuters) - Officials in Orissa said on Thursday they had earmarked 7,000 acres of government and private land for a steel project proposed by Arcelor Mittal.
Last December, Arcelor Mittal, the world's biggest steel maker, signed a multi-billion deal with the state government to build the 12 million tonne plant, and is also planning a similar sized steel unit in Jharkhand.
"We have cleared 7,000 acres of land for the steel project and captive power plant so that they can start work (aquiring land)," Orissa's Industry Secretary Ashok Dalwai told Reuters.
He said most of the land was owned by the state but Arcelor Mittal would have to purchase some from farmers, a potentially controversial process the Orissa government would facilitate.
Hundreds of families are living on the state-owned land and would have to be moved.
The company still has to tie up a mining lease.
Minerals giants South Korea's steelmaker POSCO and London-listed Vedanta Resources have run into trouble in India after local people protested plans to compulsorily purchase and mine their land.
The Arcelor Mittal project also includes a 750 MW power plant. The company had asked for 1,000 acres (400 hectares) on which to build homes for workers, in addition to 7,000 acres for the steel plant itself.
Supporters say the project would provide jobs for 5,500 people directly and another 15,000 indirectly. Continued...
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