"We are still evaluating. We do not have commitment though," Essar Group Chairman Shashikant Ruia has said.
The company would also not be averse to taking back the workers who lost their jobs following closure of the facility after Nokia-Microsoft's USD 7.2 billion deal, he said.
"We can offer training to them and make them operators in 15 days," he said speaking at a Rotary club felicitation function here last evening.
Ruia said import of mobile handset which was around Rs 75,000 crore currently, was expected to reach Rs 1 lakh crore by next year.
Nokia suspended operations at the facility, one of its largest in the world, in the industrial hub of Sriperumbudur near here, from November 1, 2014 after it was excluded from the Nokia-Microsoft USD 7.2 billion deal due to tax disputes.
Nokia started manufacturing at the plant in January 2006 and exported products to markets, including West Asia and Africa, Asia, Australia and New Zealand.
"We have started efforts in this direction (to restart the unit). The result of this effort will be that in the coming days, Nokia plant should start functioning again and people will get employment," Modi had said.
After the shutdown, hundreds of workers had opted for the voluntary retirement scheme offered by the company.
Tamil Nadu Government has blamed the erstwhile UPA government's complex tax policies for the closure of Nokia plant.
