Labour leaders at Thyssenkrupp demand more clarity in Tata JV talks

Reuters  |  FRANKFURT 

(Reuters) - Labour leaders at are seeking more clarity from management over a planned European joint venture with India's Tata Steel, warning of possible at the German group's sites.

The venture to form Europe's second-largest steelmaker last week came under fire from German unions, who say a labour agreement between Tata and its Dutch workers goes too far in protecting sites there.

"In the next weeks and months we will scrutinise every single development," Tekin Nasikkol, of Steel Europe's works council and a member of the firm's supervisory board, said in a statement on Monday.

"The joint venture planned by management is still far from being agreed. We will not accept our sites and our employees being treated less favourably."

has guaranteed that its Dutch division can continue to operate as an independent company within the venture, with control over its own profits and an independent supervisory board.

German labour representatives say that means the Dutch would be able to dodge responsibility in the new tie-up, leaving the German sites to bear the brunt of risks.

Sources told on Friday that would consider taking a majority stake in the planned venture following a widely expected public listing.

The firms have yet to sign a final agreement over the venture, which was initially expected at the beginning of the year, with a closing seen in late 2018.

The rate at which new facts and speculation were emerging was causing uncertainty among employees and "continuously eroding faith in management," said Horst Gawlik, of Steel Europe's works council.

Thyssenkrupp's supervisory board will hold an extraordinary meeting on April 12, with the tie-up on the agenda. Steel workers has scheduled a general meeting for the same day.

(Reporting by Christoph Steitz; Editing by and John Stonestreet)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, April 09 2018. 17:24 IST