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Tata
Chem in Morocco
The Telegraph
March 24, 2005
Tata Chemicals has joined
the growing list of companies from the Rs 65,000-crore
Tata group by going global. The Tata Chemicals
board today approved a decision to acquire a stake
as an equal partner in Indo Maroc Phosphore S.A.
(Imacid), Morocco, which manufactures phosphoric
acid. Tata Chemicals is buying shares from the
two existing JV partners for Rs 166 crore ($38
million). The transaction is subject to regulatory
and other approvals. Tata Chemicals will nominate
its representatives on the board of Imacid as
non-executive directors after the agreements are
signed within the next few weeks.
Imacid was promoted in
1997 as a joint venture between Office Chérifien
des Phosphates, Morocco (OCP), a state-owned company
incorporated in the Kingdom of Morocco and Chambal
Fertilisers and Chemicals Ltd. Imacid commenced
production in 1999. It produced 373,895 tonnes
of phosphoric acid in 2004 with a turnover of
$144 million and is a well-established company.
India imports 50 per cent of the world's production
of phosphoric acid, which is required for the
manufacture of diammonium phosphate, a higher
analysis fertiliser used extensively in the country.
Morocco is not only
the largest exporter of phosphatic rock in the
world but also of phosphoric acid, accounting
for over 40 per cent of the world's trade in acid.
Managing director Prasad Menon said Tata Chemicals
entry into Imacid is both timely and strategic.
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