Videocon pulls plug on Rs 20k-cr power, steel project in Bengal

This adds to the list of projects that left the state, whose industrial image has suffered

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Shine Jacob Kolkata
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 7:54 PM IST

It is curtains for yet another large-scale project in West Bengal. The Videocon group on Tuesday said it was unlikely to go ahead with its Rs 20,000-crore steel and power plant project at Jamuria.

There were speculations that the consumer electronics major might relocate the project amid land acquisition hurdles. The minimum land requirement for the project is about 1,800-2,000 acres.

“We will not be able to go ahead with the project at present. However, if the state government wants the project, it has to come up with some assurance regarding coal linkage. Then we can consider it in later stages,” Videocon managing director Rajkumar N Dhoot said on the sidelines of an industry event here.

BENGAL: INDUSTRY SHORN
Projects stuck 

(Rs  crore)

JSW Steel Ltd's Salboni Plant35,000 Bhushan Steel Project20,000 Jai Balaji Steel Project16,000 Kulpi Port Project2,600 NTPC Katwa Project1,800 Infosys’ and Wipro’s1,500 Projects scrapped/unlikely to happen PCPIR Nayachar96,000 Haripur Nuclear Project70,000 Videocon Steel Plant22,000 Singur Tata Nano2,000

The company had signed a memorandum of understanding with the former Left Front government for setting up the 3-million-tonne integrated steel plant and a 1,200-megawatt power plant in October 2007. While there were issues related to coal linkage, Coal India Ltd, the state-run coal miner, had also raised objections stating that the project area in Jamuria has coal reserves.

“We are not sitting on any land here and had neither acquired any. If required there is enough land to be acquired there,” Dhoot said. The group director, Anirudh Dhoot, in a recent visit to the state, had even sought the state government’s intervention in acquiring land.

However, according to the land acquisition policy of the Mamata Banerjee government, the state will not intervene in the process of land acquisition for industrial projects. The state government was also against allotment of special economic zones (SEZ) in the state. The Videocon Group had approached the Centre to withdraw its proposed information technology SEZ project in Jalpaiguri, citing the “business outlook”. This will add to the list of projects that have gone out of West Bengal in the recent past, including the Rs 2,000-crore Tata Nano plant, Rs 96,000-crore chemical hub at Nayachar and Rs 70,000-crore nuclear power plant at Haripur.

The state’s industrial image was further hurt by the pull-out of ABG Haldia Bulk Terminals from its operations at Haldia Dock complex on October 31. More than 650 workers lost their jobs following the HBT decision, which was triggered by political interventions in Haldia.

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First Published: Dec 19 2012 | 12:25 AM IST

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