[lbo-talk] Russia, India agree titanium dioxide joint venture

uvj at vsnl.com uvj at vsnl.com
Wed Jan 31 07:05:42 PST 2007


Reuters India

Russia, India agree titanium dioxide joint venture http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=businessNews&storyID=2007-01-25T204636Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-285022-6.xml

Thu Jan 25, 2007

By Robin Paxton and Olesya Dmitracova

MOSCOW/NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Russia and India agreed on Thursday to build a plant producing 40,000 tonnes a year of titanium dioxide in Orissa, which New Delhi will finance through part-repayment of its debt to Russia. Russia will take 30,000 tonnes of the plant's output, enough to meet about half its requirements, when production starts in 2009, an official involved in the project told Reuters.

"The plant will start production in another two years," said Yuri Parkhomenko, general director of Giredmet, the Russian state body responsible for equipment supply and construction.

Titanium dioxide is a pigment that provides brightness in everything from paint to sunscreen and chocolate wrappers.

The deal was signed during a visit to India by Russian President Vladimir Putin. India is the second-biggest buyer of Russian weapons after China and the two countries on Thursday signed a deal to construct nuclear power plants in India.

Putin said on Thursday he expected the Russian and Indian finance ministries to sign an agreement in the next two days to repay India's debt through a series of big investment projects.

"There are good prospects for large investment projects in India. To finance them, it could be possible to use such means as would lead to India's debt to Russia being wiped out," Putin was quoted as saying by Interfax news agency.

Russian media have estimated India's total debt to Moscow, which dates from the Soviet period, at between $1 billion and $2 billion.

"We have agreed to use these resources for expanding areas of cooperation and launching joint ventures," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told reporters, referring to India's debt to Russia. This would include titanium dioxide, he added.

MORE TRADE

Russia and India have said they plan to boost bilateral trade to $10 billion a year by 2010 from $2 billion now.

"They're trying to come up with some solutions where they can barter with each other to keep the amount of actual cash transferred to a minimum while eating into the debt," said Chris Weafer, chief strategist at Russia's Alfa Bank.

Parkhomenko did not say how much investment would be required to build the titanium dioxide plant. He said the companies involved in the joint venture were St Petersburg-based Tekhnokhimholding and India's Kerala Minerals & Metals Ltd.

The Russian company would process the titanium dioxide and supply it to end-users in Russia, he said.

"The project has been under discussion for several years already," said Andrei Alexandrov, general director of the international association Titan, which groups titanium firms in the former Soviet Union.

Russia does not produce its own titanium dioxide, analysts said. The product is made from ilmenite ore, which is also used in production of titanium sponge -- the raw material for titanium metal used in aeroplanes, golf clubs and darts.

Russia's VSMPO-Avisma is the world's largest producer of titanium products for the aerospace sector. It purchases ilmenite from Ukraine and last year said it was also looking to import raw materials from Sri Lanka, India and Vietnam.

Russian state arms trader Rosoboronexport last year acquired a majority stake in VSMPO-Avisma.

© Reuters 2007. All Rights Reserved.



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