| How the Tata
Steel family has grown over the years |
| 1922: |
|
The Tinplate Company
of India promoted along with Burmah Oil Company
(India trading), Glasgow |
 |
| 1958: |
|
Belpahar Refractories,
launched along with Didier Werke AG of Germany,
renamed Tata Refractories in 1986 |
 |
| 1959: |
|
The Tata Pigments,
a wholly owned subsidiary, incorporated |
 |
| 1962: |
|
TRF (earlier Tata-Robins-Fraser)
promoted along with the Associated Cement Companies,
in collaboration with Hewitt Robins Incorporated,
USA, and the General Electric Company, UK |
 |
| 1968: |
|
Tayo Rolls (formerly
Tata-Yodogawa) promoted in collaboration with Yodogawa
Steel Works and Nissho Iwai Corporation, Japan |
 |
| 1986: |
|
IPITATA Sponge Iron
became Tata Sponge Iron. In 1994, it ceased to be
a subsidiary of Tata Steel |
 |
| 1990: |
|
Tata Incorporated,
established in 1945, became a wholly owned subsidiary |
 |
| 1994: |
|
Tata Metaliks promoted
with assistance from WBIDC |
 |
| 1997: |
|
Tata Ryerson, 50:50
joint venture with Ryerson International of the
US, launched |
 |
| 1998: |
|
Jamipol (formerly
known as Jamshedpur Injection Powder), joint venture
promoted along with SKW Metallchemie GmbH, Germany,
and Tai Industries, Bhutan |
 |
| 2001: |
|
Mjunction Services,
largest e-commerce venture in India, launched |
 |
| 2002: |
|
TM International
Logistics, a wholly owned subsidiary, launched |
 |
| 2003: |
|
The Indian Steel
and Wire Products acquired |
 |
| 2004: |
|
Jamshedpur Utilities
and Services Company (JUSCO) established as a wholly
owned subsidiary |
| |
|
Lanka Special Steel
launched as a wholly owned subsidiary in Sri Lanka |
| |
|
Sila Eastern, promoted
along with Unistretch, Thailand |
 |
| 2005: |
|
NatSteel Asia, Singapore,
acquired |
| |
|
Hooghly Met Coke
and Power Company, a joint venture with WBIDC, incorporated |
| |
|
BlueScope Steel
of Australia, a joint venture, launched |
| |
|
Millennium Steel,
Thailand, acquired |
 |
| 2006: |
|
Set up by Tata Africa
Holdings in 2004, Tata Steel KZN (Pty) became a
part of Tata Steel's South African operations |
 |
| 2007: |
|
Corus, an Anglo-Dutch
steel company, acquired |