Saturday, 13 July 2013

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China To Invest $6b In Ajaokuta Steel Mill

BEIJING, July 11 (Reuters) - Chinese state-owned metals trader Sinosteel is
in talks to take over a state-owned steel mill in Nigeria and expand its
capacity to 5.6 millions tonnes from 1.3 million, Nigeria's mining minister
said on Thursday during a visit to Beijing.
The steel mill sale and upgrade would mean investment into Nigeria of
around $6 billion, Minister of Mines and Steel Development Musa
Mohammed Sada told Reuters.
Sinosteel did not confirm or deny the talks when contacted.
Nigeria, Africa's largest crude oil producer, is looking to China for cheap
funding to help it move up the value chain from exports of raw materials, a
goal that has been hampered by woeful infrastructure.
A delegation of over a dozen ministers led by President Goodluck Jonathan is
visiting China this week soliciting loans for infrastructure that Finance
Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said last week could amount to $3 billion.
"We have had discussions with Sinosteel... We would hope they will be able
to reach some agreement and transfer the management to them," he said.
The government holds 80 percent of the mill, with the remainder held by
employees and the local community.
Nigeria is delineating its iron ore deposits with a view to opening bids by the
end of the year, he added.
"We have a steel programme to produce steel within the country, but the size
of the deposits we have of iron ore is more than what we can consume
locally, so there is also (a need for) infrastructure development," Sada said.
During the visit, China Ex-Im Bank agreed to lend $500 million to Nigeria to
build airport terminals in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano. The 20-year
loan is at a 2 percent interest rate with a 30 percent local content provision,
Aviation Minister Stella Oduah said.
"It's free money, so we're happy," she said.
MAINTAINING GROWTH
China, the world's most populous country and second-largest economy, has
made several cheap loans to African nations in the past few years as it
competes with Western powers like the United States for access to the
continent's abundant natural resources and growing market for imported
goods.
Nigeria is seeking Chinese help to develop petrochemicals, metals smelting,
roads and port infrastructure and even add cold-storage capacity at airports
for exports of fresh agricultural products, to maintain economic growth that
has averaged 7 percent a year for the past five years - but which economists
say has been too dependent on crude oil.
China and Nigeria signed a framework agreement between the China
Development Bank and Nigeria's First Bank, details of which were not
provided, as well as accords covering visas, cultural exchange and
economic and technical cooperation.
The lending is part of a $7.9 billion external borrowing plan approved by
Nigeria's national assembly last year as the government seeks to increase
cheaper external borrowing and limit domestic debt.
Chinese firms are already active in road-building, mining and construction in
Nigeria, all of which require more steel.
But a glut of steel capacity in China may make it more economic to sell steel
to Africa than to build new mills there.

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