Published on 12:00 AM, September 07, 2014

Japan's steelmaker Nippon to open factory in Ctg

Japan's steelmaker Nippon to open factory in Ctg

A partial view of the steel mill in Chittagong. PhtoO: McDonald Steel Industries

Japan's biggest steelmaker, Nippon Steel and Sumitomo Metal Corp, is set to inaugurate a factory in Bangladesh this month in a bid to grab the growing domestic market.

The factory, located in Chittagong, is being built under a 50-50 joint venture inked in December 2013 with the local McDonald Steel Building Products Limited.

Mazumder Sunil Chandra, managing director of the newly-formed company, said the factory will supply materials mainly for the steel-building, shipbuilding and construction companies.

Nippon and McDonald Steel Industries Limited is targeting mid-September to start commercial production at the factory, whose initial annual capacity would be 15,000 tonnes.

The two companies have so far invested around Tk 7 crore for the project, he said, adding that initiative will ensure higher quality products at lower price.

Japan's top steelmaker's decision to enter the market comes at a time when garment factory owners are turning to locally-assembled pre-fabricated steel buildings for relocating their faulty factories.

Presently, the country's annual demand for pre-fabricated steel buildings is around Tk 2,000 crore and it has been growing at more than 35 percent for the last several years, according to industry insiders.

McDonald Steel is the pioneer in this field, having established its own production facility in 1998.

The country has a growing steel sector but almost every company has to import steel, which is a costly and time-consuming process, Sunil Chandra said.

“Imagine getting the same products at affordable prices and without getting into any of the import stage hassles -- our factory will make that possible.”

The plant will process an array of steel products such as electrical sheets, tin plates, pipes and tubes, rods and bars, coking coal, pig iron, Ferro-alloys, slag and steel machinery.

The products will be delivered directly from the factory in Japan and processed into ordered specifications in the Chittagong factory and transported to the customers.

Sunil Chandra said the company is also planning to export to Bhutan and the Seven Sisters of India.

Currently, steel consumption per person hovers around 12 kilograms in Bangladesh, while it is nearly 459 kg in Germany and 506 kg in Japan and 477 kg in China, according to World Steel Association 2013.

McDonald, which has six business units, has an annual turnover of $30 million, said its managing director Mohammed Sarwar Kamal.

 

suman.saha@thedailystar.net