Wim de Klerk, CEO of ArcelorMittal South Africa (AMSA), said if the country's biggest steel maker does not get a 10 per cent basic tariff protection from a flood of mainly Chinese cheaper steel imports, the South African steel industry is likely to become extinct.
Wim, who spearheaded moves in recent months to ease tensions between the company and the government, said AMSA was set to make a huge loss for the six months ending December.
Wim's comments came amid reports that the state-owned Industrial Development Corporation had shelved plans to build a USD 5 billion steel mill in the country with Chinese partners.
AMSA was also concerned that the South African government had not yet committed to using domestic steel in infrastructure development.
It remained buoyant about the future as it awaited government interventions, confident that this would happen because the company's 10,000 employees support more than 100,000 other jobs.
Concerns over AMSA then getting an even larger monopoly in the steel industry if the had gone through have been allayed by developments at the company since Wim took over the reins earlier this year.
Among the measure to appease government anger over AMSA's monopoly pricing practices were the introduction of a long delayed black empowerment scheme.
AMSA will also pay a Competitions Commission penalty of South African Rand 1.5 billion for its earlier price-fixing practices based on import parity and will regulate prices for the next five years.
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