Koninklijke Hoogovens

Coordinates: 52°28′42″N 4°35′32″E / 52.47839°N 4.59212°E / 52.47839; 4.59212

1918-1996
Koninklijke Nederlandsche Hoogovens en Staalfabrieken

1996-1999
Koninklijke Hoogovens
Naamloze vennootschap
Successor Corus IJmuiden (1999–2007)
Tata Steel Europe IJmuiden (2007-)
Founded 1918
Defunct 1999
Headquarters IJmuiden, Netherlands
IJmuiden blast furnaces.

Koninklijke Hoogovens known as Koninklijke Nederlandsche Hoogovens en Staalfabrieken (KNHS) until 1996 or informally Hoogovens.[note 1] was a Dutch steel producer founded in 1918.

The IJmuiden steelworks based in IJmuiden, the Netherlands was built between 1920 and 1940, first producing iron, later steel, with hot and cold rolling producing flat products. In the 1960s the company diversified into Aluminium production.

The company briefly merged its IJmuiden steel plant with German steel company Hoesch from 1972 forming the joint venture Estel but demerged in 1982. In 1999, the company merged with the larger British Steel to create the Corus Group steel company. The aluminium production assets were sold off during the Corus period. In 2007, Corus Group was purchased by India-based Tata Steel and was renamed Tata Steel Europe in 2010.

History

IJmuiden steelworks

1914-1945

In 1914 H.J.E. Wenckebach and J.C Ankersmit began planning construction of a steelworks in the Netherlands, in 1916 Ankersmit left for the USA leaving Wenckebach to continue the work;[1] on 19 April 1917 Wenckebach presented his plans which included the establishment of three blast furnaces, a coking plant, and plants for utilising the by products of the process (coking gas, and slag). In May 1917 a Comité voor oprichting van een hoogovenstaal- en walswerk in Nederland (Committee for establishing blast furnaces and steel rolling mill in the Netherlands) was set up, with the aim of creating a steel works and rolling mills.[2] The plan received support from the large industrial concerns and capitalists of the Netherlands, including Stork, Royal Dutch Shell, Steenkolen Handels-Vereeniging (SHV) and Philips; Hendrikus Colijn, Frits Fentener van Vlissingen, and J. Muysken. Additionally the Dutch state and the city of Amsterdam contributed 7.5million and 5million of the 30million Dutch guilders required to capitalise the project.[3]

On September 20, 1918 the company Koninklijke Nederlandsche Hoogovens en Staalfabrieken N.V. (KNHS) was created in The Hague. Wenckenbach was the Director, Geldolph Adriaan Kessler the secretary, and A.H. Ingen Housz the company's assignee.[2]

One of the motivations for the creation of a steelworks was to remove the reliance on imported steel,[3][4][5] the country's resources of coal and iron ore were also limited, so a site suitable for both import and export by sea was chosen; IJmuiden was chosen over sites at Rotterdam and Moerdijk due to better ground conditions.[3] The site was on the north bank of the North Sea Canal, beyond its final locks, construction of harbors began -the inner harbour opened in 1920, and the outer harbour in 1923.[6]

By 1924 the first blast furnace, casting hall, coke plant, and a electricity generating plant powered by waste gases from the coke ovens and blast furnaces. The second of two blast furnaces begun in 1919 became operational in 1926.[7] Both blast furnaces were constructed to a design by american company Freyn, Brassert &Co..[8] The coking plant continued to be expanded throughout the 1920s and 30s, and after WW2.[7] Coal tar by-product from coking was used by the chemical works Cindu (Chemische Industrie Uithoorn), cleaned coke oven gas was used in the site's power plant, and also in nearby municipalities.[9][note 2] A brickworks (NV Phoenix Maatschappij voor Vervaardiging van Hoogovensteen), designed to utilise slag from the blast furnace to make building products - the enterprise ceased in 1927.[9] A third blast furnace started operation in 1930.[11]

In 1928 the KNHS and Royal Dutch Shell created a joint venture Mekog which was to manufacturer fertiliser using chemicals derived from coke oven gas.[12] A second subsidiary was founded in 1930; an on site cement factory established as a joint venture between KNHS and the Dutch concrete company Eerste Nederlandse Cement Industrie (ENCI), it was named Cementfabriek IJmuiden (CEMIJ) and manufactured cement using granulated furnace slag as an additive.[12][13]

During the 1930s the plant was further developed, turning from raw iron production to steel production using open hearth furnaces; again Freyr, Brassert & Co. were chosen to supply the plant's design.[14] A pipe foundry was opened in 1936, and in 1938 construction of a steel conversion plant using the Siemens-Martin (Open Hearth) process was begun. The first (60t capacity) open hearth furance opened 19 March 1939, additional furnaces were added during the 1940s and early 1950s, and the capacity of the furnaces increased - by 1956 the plant had six furnaces, each of 190t capacity.[15] Construction of the plant's first rolling mill (Walserij West) was begun in the late 1930s. During occupation during WW2 the mill was confiscated and shipped to Watenstedt (Salzgitter), Germany where it was installed in the Reichswerke Hermann Göring steel plant. Post-war the mill was returned to the Netherlands, and remained in operation until decommissioned in 1992.[16][17]

The Van Leer company established steel rolling mill (Walsbedrijven NV) at the IJmuiden site in the late 1930s; a plate mill began production in 1938, followed by a strip and profile mill in 1939. As built it was outdated; utilising second hand equipment; the mill was built to supply the Van Leer company's own steel needs, and not as an independent commercial concern. was During Nazi occupation during WW2 Van Leer's jewish owner Bernard van Leer was forced to flee the country in 1941, and the mill was acquired by KNHS, and integrated into the rest of the IJmuiden site, it became known as Walserij Oost, remaining in use until 1953,[18][17][19] being replaced by the mills of Breedband NV

During World War II the company was affected by the German occupation; in 1941 Vereinigte Stahlwerke had acquired 40% of the company from the shareholdings of the state and city of Amsterdam.[20] The directors of the company Housz and Holtrop went into hiding in 1943.[21] The mouth of the North Sea canal at IJmuiden was used as a base for the Kriegsmarine, and the steelworks itself was a strategic target for attack, bombings and lack of raw materials brought production to a halt.[22][23]

1945-1999

Koninklijke Hoogovens headquarters in Velsen by WM Dudok

After the end of World War II reconstruction of the Netherlands began, as part of this process the steelworks was invested in; a separate company Breedband NV was established 19 June 1950, receiving funding from both the state and the United States Marshall Plan. The project introduced a hot and cold rolling mills for thin plate, of 60 and 75 thousand tonnes per year capacity respectively, and a galvanising line. All three installations were operating by the end of 1953.[5][24] During the same period Architect Willem Marinus Dudok was commissioned to design a head office for the company in Velsen; completed 1953.[25][26] The Breedband project moved Hoogoven's emphasis into flat rather than long products, which continued in later decades.[27]

During the 1950s and 1960 the facilities were extended; the plants first oxy-steel converted was put into operation in 1958,[28] a second cold rolling line was added in 1961, electrolytic galvanising machines were added in 1958, 1962, and 1967, hot rolling capacity had increased to 1.6million tonnes per year by 1965. On 4 May 1965 KNHS took over company Breedband NV.[29] Also in the post war period an automated casting machine was installed in 1948, and two new blast furnaces activated in 1958, and 1961, a mill for steel rod and wire production was commissioned in 1964.[24] The sixth blast furnace began operation in 1967, and a second oxy-steel plant in 1968. In 1969 a block mill capable of handling 45t blocks, and another hot strip mill with a capacity of over 3.5 million tonnes pa were opened.[30]

Labour relations at the plant were usually good; during the first two decades of the enterprises existence the organisational structure was relatively simple, with limited hierarchies, there were limited attempts at a benevolent social policy by the plant's management. Psychological testing of potential workers was gradually introduced, first for skilled workers, and after World War II for unskilled workers. Vocational training was slowly introduced after 1938.[31] In the post war period foreign workers from Italy, Spain, Turkey, Yugoslavia and Morocco began to be employed at the plant; in the 1960s the practice of housing foreign workers in floating hotels was begun.[32][33][34] Post war there was no major industrial action until 1973 when 2300 workers went on strike at the IJmuiden plant. During the Steel crisis there were no strikes, despite significant lay-offs.[35]

In 1972 the first two blast furnaces were decommissioned.[7] The same year (1972)he IJmuiden steelworks (Hoogovens IJmuiden BV.[note 3]) were formed into a 50:50 joint venture named Estel with Hoesch of Germany as the other partner,[note 4] who merged their Dortmund steel plant into the concern. IJmuiden with good access to seaborn raw materials was to act primarily as a raw steel supplier to the plant in Germany, which was closer to a large market for finished steel products - the steel crisis of the 1970s prevented any positive expansion and the company was disbanded in 1982 when funding arrangements for the loss making Dortmund plant could not be agreed.[37]

After the de-merger from Hoesch the company required restructuring, and investment: the company was producing too much raw steel with not enough semi-finished product manufacturing capacity. This led to the installation of a continuous casting, hot rolling, and steel coating lines of the next decade. The Dutch state supported the process - with a loan of 570million guilders. The workforce was reduced by 3000 (14%) over 4 years from 1982, with the company becoming profitable again in 1984.[34][38] The subsidiary Demka was also closed.[39]

The company's first continuous caster was put into operation in May 1980.[40] In 1990 a production line for producing paint coated steel rolls was started.[41] The third blast furnace was decommissioned in 1991.[42]

In the late 1990s two blast furnaces were purchased by the Indonesian steel group Gunawan Steel Group and dismantled and shipped to its development in Malaysia; Gunawan Iron and Steel. The dismantling work was carried out by a Chinese contractor which was found to be paying its 120 Chinese workers less than the Dutch minimum wage, with poor safety conditions, with 14 accidents resulting in 2 fatalities due to falls from height. The Chinese contractor was fined for breaches of safety practice, and made to improve working conditions, as well as retrospectively paying its workers 15,000 Guilders.[43]

In 1996 the company changed its official name to Koninklijke Hoogovens.[44] A new continuous caster was installed between 1998 and 2000.[45]

In 1998 a joint subsidiary with Sidmar, named Galtec, was established at Sidmar's plant nr. Ghent, producing galvanised steel.[46]

In 1998 Hoogovens employed around 23000 people, and produced approximately 8 million tonnes of steel (and 450000tonnes of Aluminium) per year, with sales of over $10 billion. The company's main products were rolled steel, including tinplate (thin gauge steel), coated steels, and aluminium extrustions. Production was distributed 20% in the Dutch market, 60% in the rest of Europe and 20% to the rest of the world.[47]

Corus group 1999-2007

In June 1999 British Steel and Hoogovens announced that they were to merge, with Hoogovens forming 38.3% of the new group; the new company provisionally title 'BSKH' was then the third largest in the world, with sales of £9.4 billion.[48] The name "Corus" for the new entity was announced in September 1999,[49] The merger was approved by the European Commission in July,[50] on 6 October 1999 the two companies were merged.[51]

The merger has also been characterised as a takeover by British Steel;[35] BS, which exported a third of its output to Europe was vulnerable to a strong pound, and the merger with Hoogovens could insulate it to some extent from such currency fluctuations,[52]

In 2000 a hot dip galvanising line Galtec 2, with a capacity of 400000 tonnes per year of zinc coated coil began operation; it was the second to be produced as part of a joint venture with Sidmar.[53] A joint venture (42.5%) Galstar LP with Weirton Steel for another galvanising line built in the late 1990s in Jeffersonville, Indiana, USA entered bankruptcy in 2001 having been closed due to poor demand after only 4 months production.[54][note 5]

Plans for the construction of an (€223 million) additional hot dip galvanising line and cold rolling mill were made in 2005, for an expected completion in 2008.[58][59]

Tata Steel 2007-present

In 2007 Tata Steel acquired Corus and subsequently renamed it Tata Steel Europe in 2010.

In 2008 due to lack of demand the Corus steel group cut production by 20%; in IJmuiden one blast furnace was taken out of production.[60]

In the period after the Financial crisis of 2007–08 (see Great Recession) the down turn led to significant job losses - 800 persons in 2009, and up to 2014 a further 1000 jobs. In the 2014/2015 financial year the IJmuiden site made a profit of c. €340million, resulting a 9.19% bonus to the workforce, then numbering c. 8000 to 9000 persons.[61]

Aluminium production

In 1964 a joint venture with Hoogovens as major (50%) partner established an aluminium company Aldel in the north east of the Netherlands; the enterprised was backed by the state which guaranteed a long term supply of energy a low price: a large natural gas discovery had been made in the region. Mining company Billiton was the other partner in the venture, along with technical support from Alusuisse.[62][note 6]

In 1970 the company acquired a shareholding in Sidal (Belgium), and in 1987 Kaiser Aluminium's European business was acquired; the acquisition made KNHS a major aluminium producer: by 1996 it had an aluminium smelting capacity of well over 10 million tonnes per annum.[64][65]

Corus period

Divisions in the board of Corus arose in 2002 when the company announced it was to sell its profitable aluminium business to Pechiney for over £500 million; Corus's British division was making a loss at this time and the sale was seen by Dutch interests as being used to prop up the loss-making British interests with no backward investment in the European mainland side of the business. The board of Corus Netherlands vetoed the sale.[66][67]

In 2006 Corus's aluminium rolling and extrusion facilities were sold to Aleris.[68] In 2009 smelters in Delfzijl (Netherlands) and Voerde (Germany) were sold to Briand Investments B.V., an associate of Klesch, a large commodity trader. This ended the businesses' association with aluminium, leaving it primarily as a steel producer.[69]

Subsidiaries and joint ventures

Demka, an earlier Dutch steel producer became a KNHS subsidiary in 1964, the company was shut down in 1984.[70]

Mekog and CEMIJ were established at the IJmuiden site in 1928 and 1930, manufacturing fertiliser, and cement respectively, using steel production by products.[12] CEMIJ was sold off in 1989.[71] A shareholding in coal tar distillation plant Cindu (Chemische Industrie Uithoorn), then named Teerbedrijf Uithoorn, was acquired in 1927;[72] the plant used tar produced as a by-product of coke production.[9] In 2010 Cindu Chemicals BV was sold to Koppers Holding Inc. (Koppers).[10]

The welded tubes factory in Zwijndrecht was acquired at the end of 1995 from Van Leeuwen Buizen (see also Van Leeuwen Pipe and Tube Group).[73] In 2011 a €3million investment was made into the factory improving facilities for manufacturing tube steel for car chassis construction.[74]

In 1983 the company, Sidmar and Phenix Works reached agreement on a joint venture SEGAL (Société Européenne de Galvanisation) at Ivoz-Ramet, Liege, Belgium which would produce hot dip galvanized steel for the car industry.[75][76][77] The shares of the company were wholly owned by Corus by 2004.[78]

Metal plating company Hille and Muller became a wholly owned subsidiary in 1997, after acquiring a 50% share acquired in 1988.[79]

A 50% share in Belgian steelmaker Usine Gustave Boël (UGB) in La Louvière was acquired in 1997 (as a joint venture HB Holding,[80]), with option to buy the remaining shares.[81] The UGB subsidiary Fabrique de Fer de Maubeuge (FFM) was also acquired, and renamed 'Myriad'.[81][82] Governmental financing for rescue investment in UGB La Louvière could not be agreed and the plant was sold to Duferco in 1999.[83][84]

The company also participated in north sea gas exploration and extraction company Nordwinning Group (1960s), its interests were sold off in 1988.[71]

Heritage

SIEHO (Stichting Industrieel Erfgoed Hoogovens, English: Hoogovens industrial heritage foundation) is dedicated to the history of the plant, and runs the Hoogovens Museum which is an affiliate of the European Route of Industrial Heritage. Corus Stoom IJmuiden (Steam Corus IJmuiden) operates steam trains on the rail network of the CIJmuiden and has workshop facilities on site.

See also

Notes

  1. Koninklijke Nederlandsche Hoogovens en Staalfabrieken N.V. : English Royal Dutch Blast Furnaces and Steelworks Public Limited; Koninklijke Hoogovens : English: Royal Blast Furnaces; "Hoogoven" (plural "hoogovens") is Dutch for blast furnace.
  2. In 2010 Cindu Chemicals BV was sold to Koppers Holding Inc. (Koppers).[10]
  3. KNHS formed its interests that were to be merged (the IJmuiden steelworks) into a company Hoogovens IJmuiden BV, source: History Steel Company (2007), "Estel is founded, 7 July 1972"
  4. In the late 1960s Hoogovens and Hoesch had planned to build a second Dutch steel plant in Rotterdam. The proposal was blocked by the Rotterdam council, having received opposition from the public and green groups.[36]
  5. Later renamed GalvPro,[55] the joint venture became banckrupt in 2001,[56] The plant was acquired by Steel Dynamics in 2003.[57]
  6. Hoogovens acquired Billiton's share in the joint venture in 1977.[63]

References

  1. 90 Years of Steel .. (2007), para. 1-2
  2. 1 2 Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), para. 1-5
  3. 1 2 3 Pederson 2008, para. 1-3
  4. 90 Years of Steel .. (2007), "Background"
  5. 1 2 Schenk 2001, p. 92
  6. Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), KNHS eerste fase, Havens en opslagen 1920
  7. 1 2 3 Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), KNHS eerste fase, Kooksfabriek 1 1924; Hoogoven 1 1924 - 1972 Hoogoven 2 1926 - 1972; Giethal 1924 - 1948; Centrale 1 1924
  8. Vrieling 1998, p. 121.
  9. 1 2 3 Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), KNHS eerste fase, Phoenix Steenfabriek 1924 - 1927; Bijproductenfabriek 1924
  10. 1 2 "Corus verkoopt belangen in teerdestillatie bedrijf aan Koppers", www.tatasteel.nl (Corus), 1 Mar 2010
  11. History Steel Company, (Corus), "Blast - Furnace 3 is lit 13 July 1930"
  12. 1 2 3 Pederson 2008, para.6
  13. Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), Cemij 1930
  14. Vrieling 1998, Table 5.1, p.117; p.129.
  15. Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), Geïntegreerd staalbedrijf, Buizengieterij 1936; Martin Staal Fabriek 1939 - 1972
  16. Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), Geïntegreerd staalbedrijf, Walserij West 1947 - 1992
  17. 1 2 van Elteren 1986, p. 128.
  18. Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), Van Leer's Walsbedrijven NV > Walserij Oost 1938 - 1953
  19. van Elteren 1986, 4.3 Kenschets van Van Leer's Walsbedriijven N.V./Walserij-Oost, pp.132-139.
  20. Sluyterman 2005, p. 118.
  21. History Steel Company (2007), "Board of directors into Hiding"
  22. "WE ARE IN A SMART DISTRESS (republished in 'World War II Experiences of Howard Thornley'", Samen Magazine, December 1977: 228–230
  23. History Steel Company (2007), "War, company is closed down" 13 December 1943
  24. 1 2 Korte geschiedenis CORUS IJmuiden, (SIEHO), De ruwijzergietmachine; Hoogoven 4 1958; Hoogoven 5 1961; Staaf en Draad Walserij 1964 - 2000]
  25. Herman van Bergeijk (2001), "1947/51 Administrative offices of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Hoogovens en Staalfabrieken (Royal Dutch Steel Works)", W.M. Dudok, 010 Publishers
  26. "architectuurgids.nl - Hoofdgebouw Hoogovens, Willem Marinus Dudok, Velsen-Noord", www.architectuurgids.nl
  27. Vrieling 1998, p. 134.
  28. History Steel Company, (Corus), "Oxy steel factory 1 officially opened, 22 Feb 1958"
  29. Korte geschiedenis .. (SIEHO), Breedband NV 1950 - 1965
  30. History Steel Company, (Corus), "Blast Furnace 6 officially lit, 28 November 1967"; "Oxy steel factory 2 put into use, 5 Oct 1968"; ""Block Mill 3 and Hot Strip Mill 2"
  31. van Elteren 1986, "Summary", pp.370-.
  32. History Steel Company (2007), "The Arosa Sun in IJmuiden, 27 February 1960"
  33. "Industrialisatie IJmondgebied 1876-1950", www.regiocanons.nl (in Dutch)
  34. 1 2 Vrieling 1998, p. 107
  35. 1 2 Michael Whittall; Herman Knudsen; Fred Huijgen, eds. (2007), Towards a European labour identity: the case of the European Work Council, Routledge, "Historical background", pp.41-43
  36. Vrieling 1998, p. 149.
  37. See sources in article Estel
  38. Schenk 2001, pp. 96-99.
  39. Pederson 2008, para.17.
  40. History Steel Company (2007), "Continuous Casting Installation, 9 May 1980"
  41. History Steel Company (2007), "Paint line put into operation, 16 March 1990"
  42. History Steel Company (2007), "Blast Furnace 3 demolished, 18 October 1991"
  43. Sources:
  44. History Steel Company (2007), "Name is changed, 1 January 1996"
  45. History Steel Company (2007), "Casting mill installation opened, 17 April 2000"
  46. Vereecke, M. (Jan 2001), "Start-up of the continuous galvanizing line Galtec", Metalurgical Research and Technology 98 (1): 105–9, doi:10.1051/metal:2001163
  47. Peter van Steen, ed. (1999), J.F. van Duyne, voorzitter van de Raad van Bestuur van Koninklijke Hoogovens : Een diepe en felle dip, maar absoluut geen dieptepunt
  48. "British Steel merges with Dutch rival", news.bbc.co.uk (BBC), 7 June 1999
  49. "Newly merged British Steel-Hoogovens group to be named Corus", nl.newsbank.com (Associated Press Archive), 30 September 1999
  50. "Commission approves merger between British Steel (UK) and Hoogovens (Netherlands)", europa.eu (European Union), 19 July 1999
  51. History of Koninklijke Hoogovens, (Corus), The 1990s
  52. Michael Harrison (3 June 1999), "British Steel poised for pounds 1bn takeover", www.independent.co.uk (The Independent)
  53. Mauro Righini; Michele Turchetto (2000), "Surface coating - Galtec 2", MPT - Metallurgical Plant and Technology 23 (3): 94–97, ISSN 0935-7254
  54. Sources:
  55. "Galvstar LP.(changes name to Galvpro LP)(Brief Article)", www.highbeam.com (purchasing), 8 April 1999
  56. Scott Robertson (30 December 2002), "Indiana ports provide help in a bid to sell idle GalvPro" (PDF), www.lockerassociates.com
  57. "Steel dynamics finalizes deal to buy GalvPro", goliath.ecnext.com (American Metal Market), 6 February 2003
  58. "Belangrijke investering bij Corus in IJmuiden", www.tatasteel.nl (Corus), 30 November 2005
  59. Sources:
  60. "Corus Group Press Release", www.tatasteel.nl (Corus), 7 November 2008
  61. "Bijna €350 mln winst voor Tata Steel IJmuiden", fd.nl (in Dutch), 25 May 2015
  62. Schenk 2001, pp. 87, 93
  63. Vrieling 1998, p. 158.
  64. Vrieling 1998, p. 101.
  65. History of Koninklijke Hoogovens, (Corus), "The 1970's"; "The 1980's"
  66. Michael Whittall; Herman Knudsen; Fred Huijgen, eds. (2007), Towards a European labour identity: the case of the European Work Council, Routledge, "A case in point: the aluminium debacle", pp.47-52; also p.43
  67. "Corus Group plc Preliminary Report for the 12 Months to 28 December 2002 - Part 3", www.prnewswire.co.uk (Corus Group), 14 March 2003
  68. Sources:
  69. "Corus Sells Last Aluminum Smelters to PE Firm", www.aluminum.org (The Aluminum Association), 23 January 2009, archived from the original on 12 July 2010
  70. Schenk 2001, pp. 101-2, note.3.
  71. 1 2 Pederson 2008, para.21
  72. Martinus Nijhoff (1973), Studies on the history of the Netherlands, Nederlands Historisch Genootschap, p. 129 quote = in order to increase sales of coal tar, Hoogovens acquired an interest in NV Teerbedrijf Uithoorn (Uithoorn Tar Company) (Tebu) in 1927
  73. "Hoogovens koopt walserij van Van Leeuwen Buizen", www.volksrant.nl (in Dutch), 1 November 1995
  74. "Nieuwe bewerkingslijn voor automotivesector in Zwijndrecht", www.tatasteel.nl, 2011
  75. History Steel Company (2007), "Foundation of Segal, 3 November 1983"
  76. "SEGAL", www.portdeliege.be, retrieved Apr 2016
  77. "Segal", www.segal.be (in French)
  78. "Corus acquires remaining interest in Segal", www.tatasteel.nl (Corus), 12 November 2004, Corus Staal BV, a fifty percent owner of Segal SA, has agreed to purchase the remaining shares in the Belgian galvanizing line
  79. "Hoogovens", www.toruw.nl (in Dutch), 24 January 1997
  80. Annual Report 1998, p. 25.
  81. 1 2 "The European Commission authorises the acquisition by the Hoogovens Group of 50% of Usines Gustave Boël", europa.eu (European Union), 29 April 1997
  82. "Aciérie, laminoir dite Fabrique de Fer de Maubeuge, puis Hoogovens, puis Myriad", www.actuacity.com (in French)
  83. Philippe Dryon; Estelle Krzeslo (28 March 1999), "Unions concerned at sale of UGB steelworks by Hoogovens", www.eurofound.europa.eu (European Union)
  84. Christian Kohl (31 March 1999), "UGB board OKs Duferco plan for reconstruction.(Usine Gustave Boel in Belgium)", business.highbeam.com (American Metal Market)

Sources

Literature

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