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GFG agrees to buy Duffel aluminium plant in Belgium from Novelis

Published 06/12/2019, 13:12
Updated 06/12/2019, 13:17
GFG agrees to buy Duffel aluminium plant in Belgium from Novelis

By Eric Onstad and Barbara Lewis

LONDON (Reuters) - GFG Alliance, owned by British commodities tycoon Sanjeev Gupta, has agreed to buy the Duffel aluminium plant in Belgium from Novelis [NVLXC.UL], the group said on Friday.

The deal for the plant, which supplies the auto industry and is one of the largest rolling mills in Europe, adds to a string of acquisitions in steel and aluminium across Europe by Gupta's privately-held group. No price was disclosed.

"The deal is consistent with GFG Alliance’s strategy to create an international, vertically integrated aluminium business," GFG said in a statement.

The group, which said it aimed to close the Duffel deal in coming months subject to regulatory approval, bought Europe's biggest aluminium smelter in France last year from Rio Tinto Plc for $500 million (L:RIO) and purchased the Lochaber smelter in Scotland in 2016.

GFG said buying Duffel would unlock savings for its two smelters in Europe in freight costs, as well as in research and development.

Duffel, which buys some of its primary metal from GFG's French smelter, produces components for the auto industry, including Volkswagen (DE:VOWG_p) and BMW (DE:BMWG), a GFG spokesman said.

Duffel has the capacity to produce about 240,000 tonnes of semi-finished aluminium products per year, according to the Aleris website.

The sale of the Duffel plant was a condition set by the European Union for clearing the $2.6 billion takeover by Novelis of automotive sheet body producer Aleris.

Novelis, U.S.-based but owned by India's Hindalco Industries (NS:HALC), is the world leader in aluminium rolled products and aluminium recycling.

GFG holdings had grown rapidly from its roots as a metals trader by spending billions of dollars buying up often troubled metals manufacturing facilities from the United States to Europe and Australia.

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